button to main menu  Clarke's Survey of the Lakes, 1787

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Page 185:-
'set upon them. Some hurt was done; but I gave special order that they should do as little hurt, and shed as little blood as possibly they could. They observed my command, only they broke all their carts, and took a dozen of the principal gentlemen that were there, and brought them to me to Witherington, where I then lay. I made them welcome, and gave the best entertainment that I could. They lay in the castle two or three days, and so I sent them home; they assuring me, that they would never hunt there again without leave, which they did truly perform all the time I stayed there; and I many times met them myself, and hunted with them two or three days; and so we continued good neighbours ever after. But the Scots King complained to Queen Elizabeth very grievously of this fact. The Queen and Council liked very well what I had done; but to give the King some satisfaction to content him, my two officers were committed to the Bishop of Durham's, there to remain prisoners during her Majesty's pleasure. Within a fortnight I had them out again, and there was no more of this business.'
I shall conclude this account of the Border Laws, with an act passed in 1662, intitled "An act for preventing of theft and rapine upon the Northern Borders of England," which was explained by two subsequent acts of Charles II.
'Whereas a great number of leud, disorderly, and lawless persons, being thieves and robbers, who are commonly called Moss-troopers, have successively, for many and sundry years last past, been bred, resided in, and frequented the borders of the two respective counties of Northumberland and Cumberland,and the next adjacent parts of Scotland; and they taking the opportunity of the large and waste ground, heaths and mosses, and the many intricate and dangerous ways and by paths in those parts, do usually, after the most notorious crimes committed by them, escape over from one kingdom into the other respectively, and so avoid the hand of justice, in regard the offences done and perpetrated in the one kingdom cannot be punished in the other:
'And whereas, since the time of the late unhappy distractions, such offences and offenders, as aforesaid, have exceedingly more increased and abounded, and the several inhabitants of the said respective counties have been, for divers years last past, necessitated, at their own free and voluntary charge, to maintain several parties of horse for the necessary defence of their persons, families, and goods, for bringing the offenders to justice: And whereas most part of the inhabitants of the said counties, being more remote from the borders than other parts, and consequently no so much exposed to imminent dangers as others, are therefore unwilling to contribute their proportionate parts of the aforesaid charge; and yet, notwithstanding, it cannot probably or possibly be avoided, but that those inhabitants of the respective counties, who hold themselves most secure, must certainly sustain much damage and detriment in their goods and estates, in case the aforesaid Moss-troopers be not timely suppressed, but suffered to grow numerous, strong, and potent, which they must needs do, in case there be no restraint upon them:
'It is therefore enacted, that the justices of the peace in sessions shall have power to order an assessment on every of the inhabitants of the said counties, for the safeguard of the said several counties and inhabitants thereof, from all injury, violence, spoil, and rapine of the Moss-trooper aforesaid; so as Northumberland be not charged above L.500 a year, nor Cumberland above L.200: And the said justices shall have power to employ any person, to be chosen by them yearly, or every two years at the furthest, to have the command of a certain number of men, not exceeding thirty in Northumberland and twelve in Cumberland, whereby the malefactors may be searched out, apprehended, and brought to trial; and such malefactors, being convicted of theft in the said counties respectively, shall not have the benefit of the clergy: And the said justices shall take security of the person by them employed in the said service, to answer the damages sustained by any person by his neglect or default, and to pay the same within four months after proof thereof made on oath at the Sessions; so as the goods stolen be entered in one of the books to be kept for that purpose, within 48 hours after the same shall be stolen or gone; which books shall be kept for that end in every market town of the respective counties, and at such other convenient places therein, and by such persons as the justices in Sessions shall appoint.'
A com-
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