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Gentleman's Magazine 1853 part 1 p.492
seal of the town. The seal is of silver, circular, and one
inch and a half in diameter; it has the date 1576, being the
year following that of a charter granted to the town by
Queen Elizabeth, and its device is a view of the town - the
same as is shown on the annexed shield.
The dies of this token, much worn, were found in 1803, among
the ruins of the New Biggin, where the company of
Cordwainers had their hall, and they are now in the museum
of the Natural History Society in Kendal.
In 1659 two other farthing tokens were issued in Kendal by
Oliver Plat and Edmond Adlington.
3. Oliver Plat was a gentleman of considerable property,
both in Kendal and its neighbourhood, and lived on his
estate at Summer How in Skelsmergh. The Rainbow inn in
Kendal belonged to him; and an oak table and an oak panel,
bearing the inscription (boldly carved), "O.P. x E.P. 1638,"
were discovered when the house was rebuilt about twenty-five
years ago. Some other articles, bearing the same initials
are preserved by Mr. John Fisher, jun. of Kendal. Mr. Plat
was a Roman Catholic, and hence, probably, the use of the
Maltese crosses.
4. Edmond Adlington displays the arms of the Dyers (as in
London and elsewhere), Sable, a chevron between three bags
of madder argent, corded or. Edmond Adlington was sworn as a
shearman-dyer in the year 1649, and followed that business
in 1655 and 1657, as evidenced in the corporation books. The
family originally from Yealand in Lancashire, and carried on
business there and at Kendal simultaneously. They were
Quakers, and tradition says that Edmond was a man of immense
bulk, weighing upwards of 24 stone, and that his wife was of
little inferior weight, being upwards of 22 stone. He
retired, and died, probably at his native place, at a great
age. Francis Higginson, vicar of Kirkby Stephen, a
pamphleteer against the early Quakers in the time of
Cromwell, says that some of them stood naked upon the market
cross on the market days, preaching from thence to the
people; and particularly mentions the wife of one Edmond
Adlington, of Kendal, who went naked through the streets
there. The initial of the name of this over-zealous lady,
"in virtue bold," accompanies that of her husband on the
token, as we often find the case on these coins.
5. In 1666 the token here figured was issued by the company
of Shearmen.
The two implements it represents are now almost entirely
disused, having been superseded by machinery, which does the
work better and cheaper. The large shears were used by the
croppers to cut all the long hairs off the cloth; and,
unless great care and precision were applied, there was
danger of cutting the cloth, so that none but experienced
workmen were employed, and they earned great wages. During
the Luddite riots in the West Riding of Yorkshire in 1812,
many of these artisans were implicated, some of them having
been thrown out of employment by the improvements in
manufacture, and many by their intemperate habits. The long
hairs are now removed by a spiral thread fixed on a
revolving cylinder, which gives a fine even nap to the
cloth. The hand teasel brush, which appears on the
reverse of the token,
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