George Pattisson
George Pattisson | |
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Person | George Pattisson |
Title | |
First name | George |
Middle name(s) | |
Last name | Pattisson |
Suffix | |
Spouse of | |
Widow of | |
Occupation | Mariner |
Secondary shorebased occupation | |
Mariner occupation | Master's mate |
Associated with ship(s) | Levant friggat (Master: Captaine Haselgrave) |
Training | Not apprentice |
Is apprentice of | |
Was apprentice of | |
Had apprentice(s) | |
Citizen | Unknown |
Literacy | Signature |
Has opening text | George Pattison |
Has signoff text | George Pattisson |
Signoff image | (Invalid transcription image) |
Language skills | English language |
Has interpreter | |
Birth street | |
Birth parish | |
Birth town | |
Birth county | |
Birth province | |
Birth country | |
Res street | Ratcliff |
Res parish | Stepney |
Res town | |
Res county | Middlesex |
Res province | |
Res country | England |
Birth year | 1618 |
Marriage year | |
Death year | |
Probate date | |
First deposition age | 37 |
Primary sources | |
Act book start page(s) | |
Personal answer start page(s) | |
Allegation start page(s) | |
Interrogatories page(s) | |
Deposition start page(s) | HCA 13/70 f.319v Annotate |
Chancery start page(s) | |
Letter start page(s) | |
Miscellaneous start page(s) | |
Act book date(s) | |
Personal answer date(s) | |
Allegation date(s) | |
Interrogatories date(s) | |
Deposition date(s) | May 3 1655 |
How complete is this biography? | |
Has infobox completed | Yes |
Has synthesis completed | No |
Has HCA evidence completed | No |
Has source comment completed | No |
Ship classification | |
Type of ship | Merchant ship |
Silver Ship litigation in 1650s | |
Role in Silver Ship litigation | None |
Biographical synthesis
George Pattisson (b. ca. ?; d. ?). Mariner.
"Went Masters Mate in and aboard the vessell the Levant friggat arlate the voiage in Controversie".[1]
Evidence from High Court of Admiralty
Thirty-seven year old George Pattisson deposed on May 3rd 1655 in the High Court of Admiralty. He was examined on an allegation on behalf of Haselgraves in the case of "Andrewes and Clutterbrooke against Haselgraves".[2]
George Pattisson stated that thirty bags of pepper were laden on the Levant frigatt at London, but in the course of her voyage from London to Alicante in the Mediterranean several of the bags "proved to be very rotten and insufficient". The bags burst and the pepper ran into the ship's bottom and into the ships pump. As a result the pump, when used, "brought up much pepper".[3]
Captaine Hasilgrave, together with Pattisson and the rest of the ship's company, seeing the problem "did cause bread basketts and ballast basketts to be sett under the pumpe for the preservation of the said loose pepper so pumped upp, which they dryed upon the decks, and putt it into sewerall of the said broaken baggs".[4]
Pattisson claimed that the ship itself was strong and staunch and the goods well packed, so that no water damage was due to neglect. Specifically, he claimed that the bags of pepper "were stowed in the midst of the said shipp upon dennidge or faggotts under which were three laires of leade, and under some of the said baggs some other goods such as perpetuana's and bayes, so that it was utterly impossiblle for the said baggs of pepper to receive any dammage or detriment by any leakage or water entring into the said shipp".[5]
Many of the bags of pepper were so wrotten that the company had to repair and amend them with some of the ship's sails.[6]