These letters graciously have been shared with the Victorian Web by Eunice and Ron Shanahan; they have been taken from their website.
The letters give an insight into the daily lives and concerns of 'ordinary'
people without whom history would not exist. The letters are a wonderful example
of how much history may be gleaned from such sources.
This is the first of two letters written in 1792 from Paris to London, both
addressed to Sir Richard Heron, Baronet, of Grosvenor Square.
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This letter is dated February 6, and it has five postal markings
- in red P. PAYE PARIS, which indicated that the only postage due would
be the inland postage from the first port in England to London. When
it reached London it received:
- the Foreign Office Bishop mark for February 9. This type of Bishop
mark was in use in both the Inland and the Foreign Office which are
identifiable by the position of the month and day. The Foreign Office
always had the month above the day. The letter was re-addressed to Brighton,
so it was transferred to the Inland Office, where it received
- an Evening Duty double-circle datestamp for FE 10 92 and
- the postal charge of 10d which was crossed out, and
- a manuscript '4' charge mark added. The postage of 10d was paid to
cover the cost from Paris to London, but as it had to be re-directed,
the cost of London to Brighton (58 miles) had to be collected from Sir
Richard Heron.
The letter carries a note 'Recd 11th Febry at Brighton, so it only took
the extra day.
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3 December 2002