HCA 13/71 f.217r Annotate
Volume | HCA 13/71 |
---|---|
Folio | 217 |
Side | Recto |
← Previous Page | |
Status | |
First cut transcription started on 02/10/12 by John Miller and completed on 29/10/12 by Jill Wilcox; pasted into wikispot on 28/04/14 by Colin Greenstreet | |
First transcriber | |
John Miller and Jill Wilcox | |
First transcribed | |
12/10/29 | |
Editorial history | |
Created 06/04/14, by CSG |
Contents
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Suggested links
Annotate HCA 13/64 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/65 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/68 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/69 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/70 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/71 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/72 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/73 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/74 Volume Page
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Transcription
1. paper did not lie upon the salt and further he cannot answere/
2. To the 3 hee saith hee knoweth that there was goods damage of boards and matter both
3. under the paper laden a board the sayed ship and at the ends thereof be hoddine the
4. salt and it this he knoweth saving the same laden and unladen and knoweth of noe
5. damage which the sayd paper received, and saith he knoweth not that the sayd
6. paper was inspected or viewed before the unladeing thereof, nor knoweth to whome
7. the sayd paper belonged And further he cannot answere./
prefam:
JRisough [SIGNATURE, RH SIDE]
Repeated before John Godolphin
***********************
The same day
Examined on the sayd allegation
John Hornell of Ratclifff Mariner thirty yeares
or therabouts a witness sworn and examined saith as
followeth videlicet./
17. To the first second third and 4 th articles of the sayd allegation he saith that
18. he this deponent being ˹on and˺ Commander of a shipp called the Bettie of Kingsale
19. in Ireland was at sea taken by certayne Brest men of warr and carried into
20. Galisia and there in the King of Spaines Dominion and from thence travailed by
21. land into ffrance to Rochell and from thence came a passenger home in the arle
22. for England in the arlate ship the Willing mynde and saith she came
23. from ˹the Isle of St Martin the island of St Maytini neere˺ Rochell in company of a their marchants shippe on the 25th day of March last under convoy of the Saphire and Constant Warwick arlate for
24. prevention of danger of being taken by Dunkirke man of warr and the
25. man of warr enemies of this nation, And saith that in her course toward
26. England found stormy weather happened, and the sayd shipp convoy so being
27. shorte of victualls made what haste they could for the coast of England
28. and the shipp Willing mynde being was thereby forced to brace sayle then
29. ordinary, to keepe company with the sayd convoyes, and thereby prevent danger of being taken by man of war, and he saith the sayd shipp the Willing
30. Minde (though she were otherwise of this deponents sight and observation a
31. a stronge and light shipp) xxxx by reason meerely of her leaving sayle to keepe company with the sayd convoyes and by reason of the weather was sonich at
32. stormie ˹was sheynes and did˺ receive water into her holes, which the master and Company could
33. not prevent although they kept the pumpe continually goeing and did their
34. true endeavour of this deponents sight and knowledge to prevent all damage
35. which might happend to any of their ladeing, soe that hee is well assured
36. that the if any damage happened to any of her ladeing it was not enough
37. any defect or fault of the shipp, nor of her master and company, but only
38. by her being strayned with bearing over much sayle, which shee was ˹then˺ consteyned
39. to doo, to keepe ˹the˺ company of the sayd convoyes or alsoe to runne the hazard
40. of looseing both shipp and ladeing by being surprized by men of warr enimyes
41. of this nation, And hee saith he this deponent having bin a mariner these sixteene
42. or 17 yeares, and a master of a shipp for about fower yeares of that tyme well knoweth
43. that shipps (though they be neere soe stansh otherwise) yet if they be forced to beare
44. sayle more than ordinary to keepe company with Convoyes though the weather bee not very tempestious but only such weather as the Willing Mynde mett with yet hee
may