Governor Basil Cochrane reports to the Duke of Atholl on the resolution of disputes involving John Clarke and his wife, Major Christian's death, and a warren matter. The letter discusses a petition forwarded by Mr Stevenson to London and criticises Stevenson's influence on Clarke's complaints. This provides administrative insight into Isle of Man governance and local disputes during Atholl's proprietorship, pre-dating the Revestment by 13 years.
Governor Basil Cochrane reports to the Duke of Atholl on a dispute involving John Clarke, Major Christian, and a Mr. Stevenson regarding a warren matter. The letter indicates Clarke has been discharged and Cochrane is providing documentation and a response to a petition, noting Stevenson's encouragement of Clarke's complaints and his controversial reputation locally.
Letter from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl reporting on disputes with merchant George Moore over land encroachment in Douglas, cargo discharge procedures at Peel, and customs enforcement. Discusses brandy cargoes, harbour capacity, officer conduct, and the need for Keys' consent on harbour improvements. Provides insight into governance, revenue protection, and merchant relations on the Isle of Man in the pre-Revestment period.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl (5 May 1758) detailing proposed improvements to Douglas Harbour including a bridge, and requests for timber and cannon for rebuilding the forts at Douglas and Ramsey. Reflects pre-Revestment administrative governance and military infrastructure priorities on the Isle of Man.
Governor Basil Cochrane reports to the Duke of Atholl on the state of Douglas Harbour, including harbour improvements and planned defence work. The letter discusses a proposed bridge over the Douglas River, the need for merchant storage facilities, and plans to rebuild the forts at Douglas and Ramsey. Cochrane addresses challenges in sourcing timber and cannon, with reference to the Tower of London and ordnance officials.
A letter from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl reporting on financial remittances to Liverpool, the backlog of appeals pending the Duke's decision, and recommending reform of the appeal process by establishing commissioners on the Isle of Man to hear minor cases locally rather than sending all appeals to London.
Governor Basil Cochrane reports to the Duke of Atholl on revenue collection (£1500 remitted via Captain Lace), merchant credit arrangements, and personnel matters including the replacement of Captain Murray due to alcoholism. The report demonstrates the administrative challenges of governing the Isle of Man and managing revenue extraction during the pre-Revestment period.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl addressing delayed revenue remittances due to naval enforcement activities (tenders and cutters), poor weather, and merchant hardship. Discusses outstanding debts, expected payments, and personal financial matters including funds from the late Mr Mylrea's estate and payments to Colonel (now Sir) John Stuart.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl covering administrative matters including remittances to Liverpool (£525), disputes over land claims by Irish gentlemen, ecclesiastical affairs involving the Bishop and tithes, and naturalisation questions. Provides insight into governance, commercial operations, and religious policy on the Isle of Man mid-18th century.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl detailing financial transactions, the arrival of ships with rum, a legal dispute over debt priority between native Manx and foreign merchants, and recommendations for naturalizing foreign traders to encourage commerce. The letter illustrates tensions between native and foreign commercial interests on the island and the Duke's prerogative powers.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl concerning the audit, clergy salary recoveries (£2658:93.75), and a legal challenge to the herring fishing trade to the West Indies. Cochrane disputes an old Restoration-era Act of Parliament that may prohibit direct export of herrings to the colonies, arguing Manx produce should be freely tradeable to any British plantation.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl regarding the sale of tithes in the Isle of Man parishes, management of church property, and administrative disputes. Cochrane reports on negotiations with Lord Derby, his strategy for beginning with Santon parish, and an incident of insult in the Court of Chancery. Directly relevant to understanding pre-Revestment governance and revenue management under Atholl proprietorship.
Report #3 from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl covering Island administration, shipping losses, French privateering threat (Monsieur Thurot), legal proceedings involving Mr Stevenson and Mr Hammersley, smuggling/contraband tea operations, and emerging claret trade from Bordeaux. Provides insight into revenue collection, trade enforcement challenges, and governance difficulties on the Isle of Man in 1760.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl on revenue collection (£1500 remitted), merchant payment timescales, and administrative personnel issues. Discusses the removal of Captain Murray due to chronic alcoholism and proposes Hutcheson as successor. Demonstrates operational governance and financial management of the Isle of Man under ducal sovereignty pre-Revestment.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl on Isle of Man affairs, including merchant morale regarding the Island's not being disposed of, trade recovery, remittance arrangements with Liverpool merchants, proposed administrative reorganisations (Receiver General and Water Bailiff positions), and discussion of coinage design with ducal imagery.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl covering administrative matters including remittance of funds (£525), pursuit of escaped vessels from an Irish port, tithe collection plans, and ecclesiastical patronage matters for Manx parishes. Provides insight into daily governance of the Isle of Man under Atholl's sovereignty prior to the 1765 Revestment.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl covering administrative matters including coin production, revenue transfers, harbour surveys, naturalization disputes, and ecclesiastical appointments. Provides insight into governance challenges, smuggling concerns, and the relationship between the Governor and key Manx figures before the 1765 Revestment.
Report from Governor Basil Cochrane to the Duke of Atholl covering administrative and commercial matters on the Isle of Man, including a shipwreck near Douglas, smuggling-related tea shipments, French privateering activity (Thurot), revenue remittances, and emerging trade routes (claret from Bordeaux). Relevant to understanding pre-Revestment governance, smuggling operations, and revenue concerns.
Letter from Governor John Wood to the Treasury (dated 27 June 1770, read 5 July 1770) objecting to the Customs Office in London directing Revenue Officers on the Isle of Man to issue orders to civil and military officers without the Governor's knowledge or consent. The letter was prompted by a duplicate notice regarding precautions against plague vessels. It illustrates tensions between Treasury/Revenue authority and gubernatorial sovereignty on the Island.
Letter from Governor John Wood to an unnamed Lord (likely Treasury Minister) dated 15 April 1766, complaining of lack of salary and funds since the Isle of Man became vested in the Crown on 17 May 1765. Wood details expenses incurred for Crown business (King's Arms, military transport) undertaken at personal cost and notes that public entertainments have also been defrayed from his own pocket. Directly relevant to the immediate administrative challenges following the 1765 Revestment.
Letter from Governor John Wood to an unnamed peer (likely the Lord Lieutenant or Secretary of State) dated 15 April 1766, complaining of non-payment of salary and funds since 17 May 1765 (the date of the Revestment). Wood details various Crown expenses he has personally undertaken, including provision of King's Arms for courthouses and payment for troop transport from the Queen's Royal Regiment. The letter illustrates the Crown's neglect of administrative arrangements immediately following the purchase of sovereignty.
Letter from Governor John Wood to an unnamed Lord (likely Treasury official) dated 15 April 1766, detailing his financial hardships and lack of salary since the Isle of Man vested in the Crown on 17 May 1765. Wood describes various expenses he has undertaken on behalf of the Crown, including provision of King's Arms for courts and churches, and a vessel for military transport, all unreimbursed. The letter illustrates the administrative chaos and financial neglect following the 1765 Revestment.
Collection of 9 letters (AP 35-1 to AP 35-14) from Governor John Wood to the Duke of Atholl covering administrative, financial, and political matters on the Isle of Man, 1762–Oct 1764. Includes revenue remittances, officer appointments, constitutional questions, and references to Westminster's emerging anti-smuggling measures and East India goods restrictions. Provides direct insight into governance, Taubman merchant conflicts, and the political context immediately preceding the 1765 Revestment.
Two letters from Governor John Wood of the Isle of Man to the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury, dated 14 March 1772, requesting payment of arrears of salary (£1,300+) and drawing bills on the Treasury for £1,000. The letters reveal post-Revestment financial dysfunction, with revenues diverted to harbour improvements and remitted to London, leaving civil establishment personnel unpaid. Also includes a 1768 bill for £1,400 showing Wood's persistent payment difficulties.
Letter from Governor John Wood to an unnamed peer (likely the Duke of Grafton or Secretary of State) dated 15 April 1766, detailing his grievances regarding non-payment of salary and allowances since the Crown's assumption of sovereignty on 17 May 1765. Wood describes expenses incurred for King's Arms in courthouses, transport of military drafts, and public entertainments, and complains of financial hardship despite fulfilling his duties to support the Crown's interests.