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ADAM JELLICOE'S DEATH
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Ever
since I have had Public Money in my hands, it has been a constant rule with
me to have the value of it in Navy Bills, &c. &c. in the Iron Chest,
that in the case of my death, the Balance might be immediately paid in; I
have never failed in observing this method, and have always had much more
than my Balance by me, till my engagements, about two years ago, with Mr.
Cort, which, by degrees has so drained me, and employed so much more of my
Money than I expected, that I have been obliged to turn most of my Navy
Bills, &c. into Cash, and, at this time, to my great concern, am very
deficient in my Balance. This gives
me great uneasiness, nor shall I live or die in peace till the whole is
restored. From memorandum of Adam
Jellicoe, November 1782; discovered in his strong box after his death. |
This document resurfaces in 1804, as an appendix to the Report of
a Commission of Naval Enquiry. File
TS11/386 at the National Archives includes this report, together with other
material covering the run-up to the impeachment of Lord
Melville in 1806. A significant
proportion of this material relates to the Jellicoe episode, although this
episode does not feature in the subsequent trial.
Much has
been made of a quotation from Henry Dundas (Viscount Melville) that Jellicoe’s “Health, and at last his Life, fell a Sacrifice to the Anxiety
and mental Suffering which his unsuccessful Endeavours occasioned." It has been cited as evidence for suicide by
Jellicoe, but there are other interpretations.
The cause of his anxiety is easy enough to fathom,
particularly if (as both later testify) neither Cort nor his partner, Adam's
son Samuel, knows of the misappropriation.
But Adam's bosses, Dundas and Navy Paymaster
Alexander Trotter, find out in July 1788.
He asks for time, offering one (or possibly more) of the patents that he holds from Cort.
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I observe by the monthly accounts
that the balance in your hands has remained considerably greater than it used
to be formerly. It does not occur to
me that there is any circumstance in the order of the Business of the Office
to render the change necessary. I
would therefore wish an explanation of it it, and if it is not necessary, I
must suggest to you the necessity of reducing it.
Letter from Navy Treasurer Henry Dundas to Adam Jellicoe, 10 July 1788 |
I shall take the earliest opportunity of paying in all my
Balance, for which there appears to be no immediate demand; but in case you think
a security necessary for the responsibility of the Situation which I have the
honour to hold under you, I beg leave to offer the inclosed, amounting to a
larger sum than I can at any time hope to have in my hands unemployed. Adam Jellicoe’s reply, 10 July 1788. |
He expects the business to generate profits and
royalties. They don't materialise. Plenty of reason for anxiety.
So what happens in August 1789?
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Immediately upon my Father’s death,
an Extent was issued against his Estate, and his Books and Papers were taken
possession of by the Treasurer or Paymaster of the Navy. An Extent was also issued against the Firm
of Henry Cort and Samuel Jellicoe, to recover the Debt due from the
Partnership to my Father. Upon my
being put solely into the possession of the Trade and Effects, I engaged to
pay all the Debts of the Firm, which I have done.
From evidence of Samuel Jellicoe to
Commission of Naval Enquiry, 10 November 1804. |
Now We, being willing to be satisfied the said sum of £36,500 so
due to Us with all the speed we can as is just, do command you that you omit
not entering any Liberty, & take the said Adam Jellicoe by his body
wherever he shall be found in your Bailiwick, & keep him safely &
securely in prison, till we shall be fully satisfid the said Debt. From extent against Adam Jellicoe, 29
August 1789. |
To judge from Samuel’s statement, the Extent is
issued after Adam’s death. But other
people’s recollections suggest otherwise.
Joseph White is the solicitor
charged with recovering the debt. He
tells the Select Committee he was engaged by Alexander Trotter “on or about the
28th August 1789”. This
tallies with the issue of the Extent on the 29th.
Alexander Trotter, meanwhile, has told the
Commission he thought Adam Jellicoe died on the 30th August, which
tallies with the Navy’s record for Adam’s employment.
So the Extent has been issued
before Adam’s death, and Samuel is wrong about the timing (no surprise after such a time lapse). And the date of Adam’s funeral (6th September) seems
to tally with a death on the 30th August. Furthermore, we can assume that the Sheriff of Middlesex receives
the Extent shortly after its issue on the 29th: doubtless too late
to carry out an arrest the same day.
And the next day is a Sunday.
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Had it been a Sunday, he
could not, by law, have been taken – a situation that gave rise to the phrase
'a Sunday man', meaning someone who could only ever go out and about on a
Sunday, for fear of arrest at any other time. From
Simon Winchester's account of William Smith's arrest in The Map That
Changed The World. |
No arrest, then, on a
Sunday. And Monday is too late, because
Adam is already dead.
And no wonder there is a
rumour of suicide, if he has heard of the Extent against him, which is yet to
be acted on!
But there is an alternative scenario.
The Commission also reports:
"Mr Jellicoe continued to perform the duties of his office until the 15th
of August 1789", while some 70 years later Samuel Smiles quotes newspapers
as saying that Adam's death follows a short illness.
Presumably the illness has kept him off work for
two weeks before his death. Maybe his
employers, aware of the stress he is under, and worried that he may not
recover, prepare to take action to ensure his death doesn't complicate the job
of recovering the money.
So is the action taken while he is still alive,
perhaps helping to precipitate his demise?
Or may they, as his son’s evidence suggests, have taken
action immediately after his death, then falsified the record?
Joseph White certainly doesn’t hesitate to press
on to the next stage: initiating extents on 31st August and 1st September to
recover the money from the Cort & Jellicoe partnership (£9,000), and from Cort
personally (£27,500).
It is worth noting that, while the solicitor
acting to recover the Navy’s money is Joseph White, the accountant appointed “to
settle Mr Jellicoe’s affairs” is George Black.
In due course, Cort applies
for bankruptcy and leaves the partnership.
With the help of his father's lawyers, Ambrose and James Weston, Adam’s son Samuel manages to raise £9,000, and keeps
control of the business: an outcome that confuses many subsequent commentators.
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Related pages Subsequent
career of Samuel Jellicoe |
henrycort.net
p5