Partial holograph draft of MINT00729 (Mint 19/3/542-3)
Considerations upon
The present state of the Tin affair.
If the late Queens contract for Tin be not renewed the several in Trustees in whose hands the Queen left {illeg} 5240 Tunns of Tin for payment to be sold for payment of the debts upon it & upon {illeg} the civil list, must sell that tin at so low a pr{illeg}iz{illeg}e that it shall not be worth the while for Cornwall to dig so much Tin as well hinder the sale of a considerable quantity of her Mats Tin annually for paying those debts. How low that price will prove is difficult to afford but considering the great stock of Tin & that Tin has been sold formerly at 40 or 50 shillings per TCun; it may be presumed that to sell as much of the Queens Tin as shall be dug for& saoled in Cornwall (suppose about 6{illeg}30 Tunns per an, the whole consumption amounting only to 1260 Tuns pr an) the price will most probably come down to less then 45s per C. If the Trustees could sell 650 Tunns per an at 45s per C the sale would last eight years & produce 23000li for paying the Queens debts. And this Annuity (rebating interest at 5 pr cent) would now be worth in ready money 185817li is may be therefore the present be recconed the full value of all the Queens Tin.
According to this recconing Cornwall would sell but only about 630 Tunns per an at 45li per Ton or less during the next eight years: wch quantity & price would occasion great complaints & discontents in that County during theat next eight years {illeg}ti{illeg}me. And on the other hand in the contract should be renewed for any number of years the King would receive from Cornwall & Devon together about {illeg} 710 Tunns per an more then the consumption would carry off. Which {illeg} yearly addition to the dead stock would muchcontinually encrease the mischief {illeg} & make it every year more & more difficultimpracticabledifficulty of gettign rid of the contractsdammage of their crown by these contracts & the difficulty of {sic} tof putting an end to thesem. contracts.
If the people of Cornwall should only dig 400 Tuns per an & the King should contract with them for it at the rate of 3li 9s 4d per C, it would be more advantageous to them then to have no contract at all. And therefore if the King should contract with them for six or eight hundred {illeg} or a thousand Tunns per an at the same price they would have great reason to rejoyce at it as a very great favour. And if heis Maty should contract with them for 11 or 12 hundred Tunns per an besides 40 Tunns from Devon, it would be as much as the consumption would carry off. at present
If heis Maty contracts with Cornwall, it will be requite{illeg} that he contract also with the Trustees for the Queens Tin. And if he pays for it about 28 or 30 thousand pounds per n for eight years togeter, or for an equivalent price in any other manner. They will in my humble opinion have no reason to complain of the bargain.
Source
MINT 19/3/478, National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, UK[After 1 August 1714 (King George's accession).], c. 537 words.