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<p>"They also beg leave to observe, that <hi rend="underline">a very great additional <lb/>"expence</hi> has been incurred on account of Prisoners of the above <lb/>"description; <hi rend="underline">which expenditure, as the various Burthens upon the <lb/>County that are already very severely felt</hi>, they are deeply concerned <lb/>"to be under the necessity of adding to the ordinary charges <lb/>"of the Prison; but this Expence <hi rend="underline">the Magistrates confidently hope <lb/>"will be reimbursed to the County</hi>, on a fair statement of the <lb/>  "several particulars."  </p>
<p>"They also beg leave to observe, that <hi rend="underline">a very great additional <lb/>"expence</hi> has been incurred on account of Prisoners of the above <lb/>"description; <hi rend="underline">which expenditure, as the various Burthens upon the <lb/>County that are already very severely felt</hi>, they are deeply concerned <lb/>"to be under the necessity of adding to the ordinary charges <lb/>"of the Prison; but this Expence <hi rend="underline">the Magistrates confidently hope <lb/>"will be reimbursed to the County</hi>, on a fair statement of the <lb/>  "several particulars."  </p>


 
<p><del>This</del> From <del>this which</del> <add>the so often mentioned</add> <unclear>posterior</unclear> Letter of His Grace's, which <lb/>I have had the honour to bring to light, <lb/>information in no small degree interesting may now be derived by <lb/> <del>from</del> these <add>same</add> Magistrates. In May 1798 they complain of the <lb/>"<hi rend="underline">crowding</hi>" of their Gaol with prisoners not <hi rend="underline">intended</hi> for it <del>by [otherwise] and</del> speak of <del>it as an</del> <hi rend="underline">inconvenience</hi>, <del><gap/> it</del> assume (as was but natural) that <del>in that respect it was</del> <add>the inconvenience was, as such,</add> unintentional on <lb/>the part of the <del>Grace</del> <add>Duke</add>, and, in mentioning it in that character, conceive <lb/>that the consideration thus submitted to <del><unclear>best</unclear></del> will, <add>that noble person</add> in the character <lb/>of a motive, give birth in his Grace's mind





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3 Jany 1802 + Note *22 Letter 3 (1 (a) Note to p. 22

XVI Imposed Portaged
(a) That this plan of the Duke of Portland's taxing crowding
Gaols and taxing the Counties [by his own authority absolute
power
] was not in every point of view a new one, appears
from a Memorial, of provided by the Middlesex Justice to his Grace about
16 months before, on the subject of the Note Answers committed
[by him with] to Cold Bath Fields. The Memorial is printed
at length in the "Papers presented to the House of Commons relating
"to the His Majestys Prison in Cold Bath Fields. Ordered to be
"printed 18 Dec<hi rend="superscript">r
1800. pp 78, 79.</hi>

"His Majesty's Justices of the Peace for the County of Middelsex ...
"do ... humbly entreat Your Grace to take into consideration the difficulties
"under which they labour; which are yet further increased by
"the addition of so great a number of Prisoners of the above description."
[State Prisoners] "to those whom the House of Correction was originally
"intended to receive,
and with which it is crowded to a great degree
"of inconvenience" ....

"They also beg leave to observe, that a very great additional
"expence
has been incurred on account of Prisoners of the above
"description; which expenditure, as the various Burthens upon the
County that are already very severely felt
, they are deeply concerned
"to be under the necessity of adding to the ordinary charges
"of the Prison; but this Expence the Magistrates confidently hope
"will be reimbursed to the County
, on a fair statement of the
"several particulars."

This From this which the so often mentioned posterior Letter of His Grace's, which
I have had the honour to bring to light,
information in no small degree interesting may now be derived by
from these same Magistrates. In May 1798 they complain of the
"crowding" of their Gaol with prisoners not intended for it by [otherwise] and speak of it as an inconvenience, it assume (as was but natural) that in that respect it was the inconvenience was, as such, unintentional on
the part of the Grace Duke, and, in mentioning it in that character, conceive
that the consideration thus submitted to best will, that noble person in the character
of a motive, give birth in his Grace's mind

Identifier: | JB/116/560/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 116.

Date_1

1802-01-03

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

116

Main Headings

panopticon versus new south wales

Folio number

560

Info in main headings field

letter 3

Image

001

Titles

(a) note to p. 22

Category

correspondence

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

e1 / f22*

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

jeremy bentham

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

letter was never sent; see note 8 to letter 1747, vol. 7

ID Number

38093

Box Contents

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