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Volume 662, Page 95   View pdf image (33K)
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REVENUE OFFICERS: ROYAL 95

in 1703, and his successor, Colonel William Bladen, served out
the remainder of the royal period. 14

In Virginia the Deputy Auditor received five percent for taking
an audit of the quit-rents, paid in tobacco, and then two and a
half percent for converting this tobacco into money or bills of
exchange. 15 This would suggest that the Deputy Auditor in Mary-
land may have taken five percent on all or a part of the Receivers'
accounts which, except for the fines and forfeitures, were in
money.

2. THE PERMANENT ESTABLISHMENT, 1673-1776.

The British customs establishment in Maryland was but one
unit of a larger system administered by the Lords of the Treasury
through a Board of Customs Commissioners. This board, set up
at London in 1671, was aided after 1767 by a Board of Customs
Commissioners for the colonies, resident at Boston. 16

Originally, enforcement of the Navigation Act (1660) devolved
upon the governor of each colony. As this obligation entailed
some trouble, Governor Charles Calvert, in November, 1672,
obtained a salary of £ 200 sterling payable from the previous
Christmas. 17

After enactment of the plantation duty a separate customs
establishment was set up by commissions and instructions of
November and December, 1673. Governor Calvert now became
Collector of Patuxent District, which at this date embraced the
whole of Maryland, and Colonel Henry Coursey, appointed Sur-
veyor and Comptroller General of the province, was instructed to
audit his accounts. 18

Instead of his former salary Collector Calvert was now to be
allowed certain fees, for entering, clearing, granting certificates,

14 Calendar of Treasury Books, XVIII, 377. Unlike his predecessor Bladen
actually audited the Maryland accounts (Blathwayte Papers, Huntington Library).

15 Calendar of Treasury Books, XIX, 278; Archives, XXIII, 497.

16 For a description of the customs establishment as a whole see E. E. Hoon,
The Organization of the English Customs System, 1696-1786 (New York, 1938)
and C. M. Andrews, The Colonial Period of American History, IV, England's
Commercial and Colonial Policy
(New Haven, 1938).

17 Treasury Warrant to Customs Commissioners, Nov. 12, 1672 (Calendar of
Treasury Books,
III, part 2, 1345); Charles Calvert to Lord Baltimore, June 2,
1673 (Calvert Papers, I, 285). See also Governor Calvert's proclamation about
the Navigation Law, Jan. 31, 1661/2 (Archives, III, 446) and early instructions
about enforcement of the law (Ibid., V, 446; XVII, 392; XX, 345; XXIII, 311).

18 Calendar of Treasury Books, IV, 427. Both were appointed under a Treasury
warrant of Nov. 27, 1673.


 

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