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<head>II Collins Extracts 5</head> | <head>II Collins Extracts 5</head> | ||
<note>Economy Famine probable</note> | <note>Economy Famine probable</note> | ||
<p>on the face of the most recent accounts. In October 1799, <lb/> at the very time of <del>ad</del> putting the <add><del>Colony</del> or</add> Convicts upon short allowance, <lb/><unclear>&</unclear> upon the strength of "a very promising appearance <lb/>of the new crops" <note># Collins p. 269</note> the Governor reduces the prices <lb/>of wheat — of the wheat purchased by him of the settlers <lb/>from £10<hi rend="superscript">d</hi> a bushel the more mere <add>established price</add> to 8<hi rend="superscript">d</hi>: and this <del>at a time when</del> but little if at all after the time when <lb/>£.1:10 <add>thrice the ordinary price</add> had been the price paid for the same article <lb/><gap/> by individuals <add>[+] in March 1800</add> <note><hi rend="superscript">[+]</hi> In the next month November the prospect was already so much reduced by storms and caterpillers, as to cause a general account of doubt to be <del>argued</del> reacted to</note> | <p>on the face of the most recent accounts. In October 1799, <lb/> at the very time of <del>ad</del> putting the <add><del>Colony</del> or</add> Convicts upon short allowance, <lb/><unclear>&</unclear> upon the strength of "a very promising appearance <lb/>of the new crops" <note># Collins p. 269</note> the Governor reduces the prices <lb/>of wheat — of the wheat purchased by him of the settlers <lb/>from £10<hi rend="superscript">d</hi> a bushel the more mere <add>established price</add> to 8<hi rend="superscript">d</hi>: and this <del>at a time when</del> but little if at all after the time when <lb/>£.1:10 <add>thrice the ordinary price</add> had been the price paid for the same article <lb/><gap/> by individuals <add>[+] in March 1800</add> <note><hi rend="superscript">[+]</hi> In the next month November the prospect was already so much reduced by storms and <sic>caterpillers</sic>, as to cause a general account of doubt to be <del>argued</del> reacted to</note> Before harvest <gap/> came storms and <lb/>inundations by which the prospect of an abundant <gap/> <lb/>harvest was wholly destroyed <del>at</del> <add>in</add> the most fertile not to <lb/>say only fertile districts — Georges river and the Hawkesbury. <hi rend="superscript">+</hi> <lb/> <note><hi rend="superscript">+</hi> P. 289 as a measure of necessary prudence. p. 273.</note> </p> | ||
<p><del>Entipr</del> Setting aside the hypothetical plan of <gap/>, <lb/>the Governor's purchases of grain would be <gap/> <lb/>by the amount necessary for the subsistence of the Convicts' <lb/><add>(the person</add> <del>under his immediate dependency</del> for whom he was bound<lb/> to provide subsistence) deducting the amount produced <del>by</del> on <lb/>Government land, by the labour of those <del>to</del> same <lb/>Convicts. The <add>quantity of</add> land in Government hands was by the <lb/>last recounts June 1801 above a tenth of the <lb/> quantity in the hands of individuals. </p> | |||
25 Oct 1802 II Collins Extracts 5 Economy Famine probable
on the face of the most recent accounts. In October 1799,
at the very time of ad putting the Colony or Convicts upon short allowance,
& upon the strength of "a very promising appearance
of the new crops" # Collins p. 269 the Governor reduces the prices
of wheat — of the wheat purchased by him of the settlers
from £10d a bushel the more mere established price to 8d: and this at a time when but little if at all after the time when
£.1:10 thrice the ordinary price had been the price paid for the same article
by individuals [+] in March 1800 [+] In the next month November the prospect was already so much reduced by storms and caterpillers, as to cause a general account of doubt to be argued reacted to Before harvest came storms and
inundations by which the prospect of an abundant
harvest was wholly destroyed at in the most fertile not to
say only fertile districts — Georges river and the Hawkesbury. +
+ P. 289 as a measure of necessary prudence. p. 273.
Entipr Setting aside the hypothetical plan of ,
the Governor's purchases of grain would be
by the amount necessary for the subsistence of the Convicts'
(the person under his immediate dependency for whom he was bound
to provide subsistence) deducting the amount produced by on
Government land, by the labour of those to same
Convicts. The quantity of land in Government hands was by the
last recounts June 1801 above a tenth of the
quantity in the hands of individuals.
Identifier: | JB/116/093/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 116. |
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116 |
panopticon versus new south wales |
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ii collins extracts |
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jeremy bentham |
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