THIS IS THE TEST SERVER CATALOGUE IT WILL NOT BE UP-TO-DATE
 visit the Parliament website.

Substance of the proceedings at the late and solemn investigation, at the Excise Office, Cork, on Tuesday, Nov. 24, 1818, and following days, before William Pennefather, Esq. Collector, John Morgan Esq. Acting Surveyor-General. Directed in consequence of a memorial forwarded by certain spirit retailers of Cork, to his Excellency the Lord Lieutenant. With the causes that led thereto. To which is prefixed, a letter to the Right Hon. Charles Grant, explanatory of the state of the excise, by Mr T. Coyle, of this city who conducted the investigation on behalf of the memorialists.

Contributor(s): Coyle, Thomas.Publisher: Cork : printed and sold by Richard Tivy, 1819Description: 49,[1]p.Subject(s): License system -- Ireland -- History
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Class number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Reference material House of Lords Library - Palace Upper (Harcourt) Corridor, Second Floor Peel Tracts VOL.75(14) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 21256-1001
Browsing House of Lords Library - Palace shelves, Shelving location: Upper (Harcourt) Corridor, Second Floor, Collection: Peel Tracts Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
No cover image available
No cover image available
No cover image available
No cover image available
No cover image available
No cover image available
No cover image available
VOL.75(11) Observations on illicit distillation and smuggling; with some remarks on the reports of Woodbine Parish Esq. Chairman of the Excise Board, on that subject. VOL.75(12) A letter to the Right Honourable Lord Viscount Sidmouth, Secretary of State for the Home Department, on the present defective system of licensing public-houses and liquor-shops; the propriety of a revision of that system, the necessity of clear and definite laws, and an appeal on behalf of the body of licensed victuallers, to the legislature in general, for the prosecution of trial by jury / VOL.75(13) Substance of a speech on the best means of counteracting the existing monopoly in the supplying of beer; exemplifying the evil, and tracing its source to the system of arbitrary licensing of victualling houses, peculiar to Great Britain: delivered at a public meeting holden at the Crown and Anchor Tavern in the Strand, on January the 26th, 1818 / VOL.75(14) Substance of the proceedings at the late and solemn investigation, at the Excise Office, Cork, on Tuesday, Nov. 24, 1818, and following days, before William Pennefather, Esq. Collector, John Morgan Esq. Acting Surveyor-General. Directed in consequence of a memorial forwarded by certain spirit retailers of Cork, to his Excellency the Lord Lieutenant. With the causes that led thereto. To which is prefixed, a letter to the Right Hon. Charles Grant, explanatory of the state of the excise, by Mr T. Coyle, of this city who conducted the investigation on behalf of the memorialists. VOL.75(15) Statement of the distillers in Scotland who make spirits for the consumption of England; containing an account of the hardships to which they are subjected in exporting their spirits to England, from the unequal duties imposed on them by the existing laws ... VOL.75(16) To the Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners of His Majesty's Treasury, the humble petition of James Haig, malt distiller at Lochrin, Edinburgh. VOL.75(17) Police anecdotes, or the stratagems of office clearly given; being a correct and authentic statement of the plunders and peculations which retailers of spirits in Dublin are at present subject to, with the lives and characters of some colonels, captains and justices.

Contact us

Phone: 0207 219 5242
Email: hllibrary@parliament.uk
Website: lordslibrary.parliament.uk

Accessibility statement