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John Locke and Irish Linen Manufacture: A New Manuscript

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2025

David Armitage*
Affiliation:
Department of History, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA
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Abstract

The following communication sets a previously unrecorded manuscript by John Locke in context. The manuscript comprises his remarks on a bill to create a ‘Flax and Hemp Company of Ireland’, laid before the Irish House of Commons in November 1695, which circulated in London in late 1697. Locke likely made his remarks for the lord chancellor, Sir John Somers, among whose papers they survive. The manuscript sheds new light on Locke’s practical involvement in post-revolutionary political economy, on his engagement with Ireland, and on his thought regarding corporations and corporate corruption.

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When the Commission for Trade and Plantations first met at Whitehall on 25 June 1696, John Locke was among its original members, having been persuaded to ‘sacrifice a little of [his] Philosophicall inclinations to the great necessities … of Trade’.Footnote 1 William III’s charge to the newly created body was expansive. The members of the Board of Trade, as it would come to be known, were to gather information and set policy regarding ‘the General Trade of … [the] Kingdom and the severall parts thereof’, to discern ‘the proper methods for setting on worke and employing the poor’ of England, and to arrange the supply of naval stores; they were also charged with ‘Inspecting and Improving Our Plantations in America and elsewhere’, including Ireland.Footnote 2 Over the next four years, Locke would be notably assiduous in his duties, foremost among them being to attend the board’s regular sessions and to produce reports and ‘representations’ for the king and for the lords justices who acted as William’s regents when he was away on campaign.Footnote 3 Between the board’s inception and Locke’s resignation for health reasons in June 1700, he sat for about nineteen months in total, punctuated by annual vacations in the winter months to avoid the smoke and fog of London.Footnote 4 During that time, he was present for more than 370 sessions of the board and put his name to at least 150 collective documents it issued; only once did he refuse to sign one of the board’s reports.Footnote 5

In March 1700, shortly before Locke’s departure, the board replied to a parliamentary inquiry concerning its activities since its creation. Locke had had a hand in many of them: for example, drafting legislation for commercial arbitration, reporting on the state of the coinage, and revising the poor laws. Also prominent was an area where he had acquired particular expertise: ‘the Trade of England and Ireland’. The commissioners reported that ‘the most proper means to divert the people of Ireland from Applying themselves to the Woollen Manufactures was by giving them such Encouragement in the Manufacture of Linnen as might engage them heartily in it’.Footnote 6 Between 1695 and 1699, the board repeatedly attempted to redirect the Irish economy toward domestic linen manufacture and away from competition with the English woollen industry.Footnote 7 ‘Nor have our Endeavours been wanting by several Representations to his Majesty, and considerations had of Bills transmitted from Ireland’, the commissioners reported in 1700, ‘to induce that Parliament towards passing such Acts in reference to both Manufactures as may be of mutual benefit to both Kingdoms.’Footnote 8 Among its ‘Representations’ was a report of August 1697 to the lords justices on the Irish linen industry: since 1876, this has been known to be Locke’s composition, though his Irish interests have otherwise attracted little attention.Footnote 9

A newly discovered manuscript sheds fresh light on Locke’s consideration ‘of Bills transmitted from Ireland’. In the autumn of 1697, the Board of Trade dealt with two draft bills from Dublin concerning Irish linen manufacture. The first to arrive in England had been presented to the Irish parliament in August 1697, just as Locke was completing his own report for the board; the second, originally laid before the Irish parliament in November 1695, came in late October 1697 as part of a rearguard action by Irish opponents of the more recent legislation. Until recently, it had not been noticed that Locke annotated one of the two surviving manuscript copies of that 1695 bill or that it was accompanied by a set of running comments in his hand. Those remarks illuminate his involvement with practical politics in the 1690s, particularly his role as political and economic adviser to Sir John Somers (1651–1716), later 1st Baron Somers. They provide new evidence for his vision of the political and economic relationship between England and Ireland in the period after the Glorious Revolution. And they also reveal his evolving conceptions of corporations and of corporate corruption. Locke’s remarks join several recently recovered manuscripts that offer fresh insight into his views on English law, the franchise, religious toleration, and the Revolution Settlement, among other matters.Footnote 10 Until their discovery in 2023, the remarks on Irish linen manufacture had never been identified as Locke’s nor had they been mentioned in any sale or library catalogue. This communication provides the first discussion and transcription of them.

I

The manuscript comprises Locke’s comments and queries on a bill to create ‘the Flax and Hemp Company of Ireland’ presented to the Irish House of Commons on 22 November 1695 by the Irish Whig MP and linen promoter James Hamilton of Tollymore, County Down (1644–1706).Footnote 11 The document carries no title or endorsement but may be called Locke’s ‘Remarks on the bill to create the Flax and Hemp Company of Ireland’ (hereafter, ‘Remarks’).Footnote 12 These ‘Remarks’ are bound into a copy of the 1695 bill carrying the title ‘Manuscript/about the linnen manufacture in Ireland’; both are contained in a miscellany of ‘Historical and other tracts’ from Sir John Somers’s noted antiquarian collection now held by the British Library as Additional MS 27,382.Footnote 13 This volume appeared in the earliest catalogue of Somers’s manuscripts as ‘MS Miscell. relating to matters of State and Policy … Liber 30’ and it was among the moiety of Somers’s library acquired in 1729 by his brother-in-law, the master of the rolls, Sir Joseph Jekyll (1663–1738), thirteen years after Somers died intestate in 1716.Footnote 14 On 1 March 1739, it was sold at the auction of Somers manuscripts from Jekyll’s library for 7s. 6d. to ‘Paul Jodrell Esqr., of Sion Hill. Middx.’Footnote 15 This was presumably the barrister, bencher, and sometime librarian of Lincoln’s Inn, Paul Jodrell (1679–1744).Footnote 16 Jodrell’s purchase of the miscellany in 1739 ensured that it escaped the fire that destroyed the bulk of Somers’s private papers in January 1752.Footnote 17 Both Somers’s manuscript catalogue and the list of the Jekyll auction note the copy of the bill but neither mentions the accompanying notes.Footnote 18 The volume’s whereabouts are so far unknown between March 1739 and June 1866, when the British Museum library acquired it from the Anglo-American book dealer Henry Stevens.Footnote 19 A note on its binding records that it was rebound a century later, in July 1967. At that point, the pages were conserved using Japanese paper and the folios consecutively numbered in pencil: it was presumably then that Locke’s ‘Remarks’ were bound within the pages of the 1695 bill, where they remain today.

The ‘Remarks’ consist of a single half-sheet (152 mm × 195 mm), folded once to make four leaves, with chain lines as well as a watermark that cannot now be identified.Footnote 20 The first three leaves (fos. 10r–11r) carry manuscript text, while the fourth leaf (fo. 11v) is blank save for the inverted endorsement, ‘Lo.’, possibly an abbreviation for ‘lord chancellor’: that is, Somers as he was from April 1697 to April 1700. The accompanying copy of the 1695 Irish linen bill comprises ten sheets (184 mm × 295 mm), written on each side, with the bill’s paragraphs numbered sequentially in Locke’s hand.Footnote 21 This is one of the only two remaining copies of the 1695 bill, both now in Britain: as the first historian of the Irish linen industry ruefully noted in 1925, much relevant Irish material ‘failed in the catastrophe of the Dublin Record Office’ in 1922.Footnote 22 Locke remarked on sixteen of the bill’s twenty-eight paragraphs (§§ 3, 6, 7, 8, 10, 13, 16–19, 20, 22–5, 28), before ending his comments summarily with a dismissive concluding sentence (Figure 1). Because he keyed his ‘Remarks’ directly to the copy of the 1695 bill in the Somers miscellany, it seems likely that they have been together since 1697.

Figure 1. John Locke, Remarks on the bill for creating the Flax and Hemp Company of Ireland, late October 1697?, BL, Add. MS 27, 382, fo. 11r. Reproduced with permission of the British Library.

Locke’s ‘Remarks’ follow a pattern of manuscript commentary that he deployed across his career, by which he compiled short responses on a document seriatim, either on the flyleaf of a book or manuscript or on a separate sheet, as here, together with questions or ‘Quæres’ (often marked ‘q’ or ‘Q’) and occasional answers to those queries.Footnote 23 This was his practice when commenting on Charles Wolseley’s Liberty of conscience, the magistrates interest (1668) in 1667–8; when editing and amending the ‘Fundamental constitutions’ of Carolina in 1669 and 1682; when criticizing William Penn’s ‘Great law’ and his Frame of the government of the province of Pensilvania (1682) in 1686; and when taking notes on other documents while on the Board of Trade between 1696 and 1700, for example.Footnote 24 This process was not as elaborately structured as Locke’s better-known method of commonplacing, yet it was characteristic of his practice of ‘studying for action’, particularly (but not only) in his secretarial and bureaucratic capacities.Footnote 25 In this case, the ‘Remarks’ fulfilled two immediate functions. For Locke himself, they comprised an aide-memoire as he summarized the contents of the 1695 bill and assessed its weaknesses and obscurities. For Somers, Locke’s notes and concluding judgment formed an executive summary together with actionable advice as he weighed the bill’s provisions.

Locke’s ‘Remarks’ can be dated within four weeks, between about 20 October 1697 and 17 November 1697, with a date in late October 1697 most likely. Locke was then in close contact with Somers, as both were involved in considering the legislation regarding the Irish linen manufacture in their respective public offices: Locke as a commissioner of the Board of Trade, Somers as lord chancellor on the privy council. Before that moment, Locke and Somers had been prepared by years – in Locke’s case, decades – of engagement with the political economy of Ireland’s relationship with England, and more specifically with the question of replacing Ireland’s woollen industry with linen manufacture. The abortive 1695 linen bill returned to discussion when competing interests in Ireland sought to derail passage of the 1697 bill. As the renewed Irish legislation wound its way through the bureaucracy in Whitehall, Locke and Somers were both subject to lobbying. The ‘Remarks’ provide evidence of that campaign and of Locke’s critical response to it.

II

Ireland’s ambiguous relationship with England, as a separate kingdom with its own parliament and effectively a colony under English legislative and administrative control, became increasingly fraught after the Restoration.Footnote 26 Competition between the Irish and English woollen industries – a point of controversy readily exploited by English political and economic lobbies, especially by woollen interests in the west of England – sharply exposed that ambiguity. The three main options for the stewards of the English economy were to throttle rising competition from the Irish woollen industry outright; to discourage it piecemeal; or to encourage Irish manufacture of linen in place of wool in order to rebalance relations between the two kingdoms.

Locke first faced these questions while secretary to Charles II’s Council of Trade in the early 1670s. The king brought Irish competition with English woollens to the council’s attention in May 1673, in the context of economic depression in the west of England. Later that year, Locke’s patron at the time, Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st earl of Shaftesbury (1621–83), argued that the immediate cause of the depression in the West Country was a labour shortage in England rather than Irish woollen production, and he opposed legislation penalizing the Irish woollen trade because it could be easily circumvented by smuggling.Footnote 27 In light of earlier efforts to promote Irish linen production by Strafford in the 1640s and Ormond in the 1660s, both Locke and Shaftesbury believed at the time that gradually replacing Irish woollen production with cultivation of hemp and flax and manufacture of linen would most effectively create complementarity between the English and Irish economies.Footnote 28

Following the Glorious Revolution, English administrators and the Irish parliament reached similar conclusions about the need to promote the linen industry in Ireland. For instance, when Henry Capell, 1st Baron Capell of Tewkesbury (1638–96), was appointed lord deputy of Ireland, his instructions in May 1695 included ‘endeavour[ing] to improve the trade of Ireland, so far as may consist with the laws made and in force for the welfare and benefit of commerce in England … particularly to improve the fishery trade and the linen manufacture’.Footnote 29 When the Irish House of Commons convened later that year, it created a committee in early October 1695 ‘to consider of the Improvement of Trade, as to the Linen Manufacture, Butter Casks and Iron, and other Merchandize of this Kingdom’: among its members were Hamilton of Tollymore and the Dublin merchant and writer on trade Sir Francis Brewster (ante 1642–1705), who would later become the crucial link with Locke and Somers in late 1697.Footnote 30 Within a few weeks of its creation, the committee produced the ‘Heads of a Bill for promoting the Linen, Sail Canvas, Cordage, and other Manufactures of Hemp and Flax’ in Ireland that Hamilton laid before the Irish House of Commons in November 1695 and that two years later would find its way into Locke’s hands via Brewster and Somers.Footnote 31 In 1697, Hamilton would call this, in a letter passed to Locke via their common friend, William Molyneux (1656–98), ‘the Shcheme Offered to my Lord Capell in 1695’ and, more simply, ‘the Scheme in 1695’.Footnote 32 By then, however, Hamilton was backing the different 1697 project for Irish linen manufacture, while Brewster promoted a revised version of the 1695 ‘Scheme’ in its place.

According to the copy surviving among Somers’s papers, the 1695 bill proposed a unitary national corporation – ‘The Flax and Hemp Company of Ireland’ – to manage the Irish linen industry. This was to be floated on £300,000 provided by ‘diverse persons of quality in England and well wishers to this Kingdome of Ireland’, together with some money from Ireland itself. The company would disburse equal amounts of capital to each Irish county to launch the manufacture. For the following twenty-five years, it was to receive annual quantities of flax, yarn, and hemp from every able-bodied adult in Ireland except those in holy orders, with penalties for any who failed to submit their quota. It would also run competitions, with prizes for the best weavers, each year. Tithes levied on manufactures would support the elderly and the infirm, together with spinning schools for young children. All the company’s plant would be exempt from taxes, as its buildings would be free from billeting and its officers from impressment. The company itself would choose the members of county commissions to supervise its operations, with commissioners receiving large annual salaries for their work; the Irish parliament would select general commissioners – also well remunerated – to oversee the company’s affairs. Finally, the company would have the power to make its own by-laws, so long as they were not repugnant to the terms of the Irish parliament’s original act.Footnote 33

The 1695 linen bill reached the floor of the Irish parliament with support from the English authorities. In October 1695, Capell reported to Somers that he had promised the bill’s promoters ‘all the assistance I could make for it’ and ensured that a copy reached Somers himself by way of its ‘Cheife compiler’: that is, Sir Francis Brewster.Footnote 34 However, the house adjourned in December 1695 before the bill could advance out of committee. The Irish parliament would not meet again until July 1697. When it did reconvene, the lords justices of Ireland reminded its members that ‘the Linen Manufacture … is the most beneficial Trade that can be encouraged in Ireland’. A new committee was rapidly appointed once more ‘to prepare Heads of a Bill for Encouraging the Linen Manufacture in this Kingdom’ from scratch; Brewster and Hamilton were again among its members.Footnote 35

The Board of Trade was born while the Irish parliament was adjourned. William III’s charge to the board to consider the position of Ireland within his archipelagic empire soon brought the Irish linen industry back to Locke’s attention, initially in the context of sourcing naval supplies for the king’s wars, in aid of which the English parliament had passed its own ‘Act for Encouraging the Linen Manufacture in Ireland’ in April 1696.Footnote 36 After his appointment to the board, Locke wrote in September 1696 to his closest friend and most frequent correspondent in Ireland, William Molyneux, soliciting local information about linen production there. He admitted to Molyneux that his motives were hardly disinterested: ‘my conscience will never reproach me for not wishing well to my country, by which I mean Englishmen and their interest every where’. If Locke mean to include the Anglo-Irish Molyneux in his idea of country, Molyneux swiftly corrected him: ‘England most certainly will never let us thrive by the Wollen trade’, Molyneux retorted: ‘This is their Darling mistris, and they are jealous of any Rival.’ He told Locke that ‘now all is blown up’ because two previous attempts to promote linen manufacture in Ireland had failed: the first, by English parliamentary statute in 1666, due to a sunset clause after twenty years; the second, set up as the King’s and Queen’s Corporation for the Linen Manufacture in 1690, amid ‘Quarrels and Controversys’ and ‘Tricks’ by the corporation’s promoter, the enterprising French Huguenot refugee Nicholas Dupin.Footnote 37

In this exchange, Molyneux did not refer to the 1695 linen bill, though he had been a member of the Irish parliament at the time and knew Hamilton of Tollymore well.Footnote 38 When the issue returned in late 1697, Brewster and Hamilton would be at odds with one another, as Brewster directly lobbied Locke and Somers in London while Hamilton pressed his case with Locke at a distance via Molyneux. It was out of that moment in late October and early November 1697, with competing draft bills from 1695 and 1697 under scrutiny in London alongside Locke’s own report on the Irish linen industry, that Locke’s ‘Remarks’ emerged.

III

The mounting effects of wartime agricultural depression and renewed pressure from pastoral interests in the west of England brought Irish linen manufacture back onto the political–economic agenda in 1697. In late April that year, the English secretary of state, Sir William Trumbull, asked the Board of Trade to inquire into the state of Anglo-Irish commercial relations ‘and how they may be improved to the advantage of both Nations’.Footnote 39 At the end of the month, Brewster testified to the board in Locke’s absence that the Irish poor, though ‘so idle a People’, were nonetheless better suited to manufacture linen than wool.Footnote 40 On 17 August, when the board met again to examine the subject, Somers surprisingly joined them, ‘unexpected of the rest, and proposing the very same subject of deliberation, as of great importance to be Expedited; because of the present sitting of the Irish Parliament’ that had begun in late July.Footnote 41 The board then called further witnesses on the topic, one of whom noted that Locke in particular was ‘very desirous to inform himself what may conduce to the improvement of the Linnen Manufacture in his Majesties Dominions’.Footnote 42 On 24 August, the board ‘pitched upon’ Locke’s proposal for the Irish linen industry and on 30 August Locke presented his detailed report, together with plans for its promotion; within two days, all the board’s members had endorsed his ‘Draught of a Representation … tending particularly to the discouragement of the Woollen Manufacture and Encouragement of the Linnen Manufacture in Ireland’.Footnote 43

The key planks of Locke’s report were consistent with complaints from the English lobby against Irish woollens; they also confirmed his and Shaftesbury’s earlier concerns that embargoes and penalties would be impractical because ‘the Temptation of greate profit may Encourage private men to bribe Officers, and run other risks’. The aim of Locke’s plan was gradually to ‘hinder … the Growth of the Woollen Manufacture in Ireland’ by imposing duties on the oil, teasels, and other materials needed to promote it. At the same time, he urged that parallel fiscal measures for linen manufacture ‘be set on foot and soe encouraged in Ireland, as may make it the Generall Trade of that Country’: no duties on importing hemp seed and linseed; remissions of tithes and taxes from flax and hemp growing for twenty-one years; and graduated increases in duties on imported hemp, flax, and the products derived from them. Locke also proposed setting up spinning schools for children aged between six and fourteen, or even as young as four, where they could learn to spin flax using the hands-free ‘double wheel’ invented by his friend the Unitarian philanthropist and projector Thomas Firmin (1632–97).Footnote 44

Annual prizes would be offered for the best linen and sailcloth that Irish men and women could produce. To defray the costs of the new industry, every person over fourteen years old would have to deliver an annual quantity of linen yarn to be woven into cloth and then sold; defaulters would be fined and any financial shortfall made up by duties on tobacco imported into Ireland. A board of directors would appoint officers in each county and oversee every stage of the manufacture, from buying and selling to building and bleaching. Locke concluded with an elaborate scheme for pegging the directors’ salary increases to expansion of linen manufacture: ‘as the whole success of this undertaking seems unavoidably to depend upon the facility, skill, and Diligence of the said Directors’, he wrote, they should not be offered ‘great salaries’ to begin with. Crucially, he argued that the enterprise should not be ‘put into the management of a Company’ because ‘the Greediness of present gaine, occasions stock jobbing, or contests amongst themselves, about sharing the profitt, whilst the improvement thereof is neglected’.Footnote 45 There is no evidence that Locke knew any details of the 1695 Irish bill at the moment he wrote his report, but this criticism of corporations would soon shape his reaction to it.

As he prepared his plan, events were moving swiftly in Ireland. Four days before Locke submitted his report to the board on 30 August 1697, Hamilton of Tollymore laid the new ‘Heads of a Bill to Encourage the Linen Manufacture in Ireland’ before the Irish parliament, on 26 August.Footnote 46 In contrast to the 1695 bill, this new legislation proposed multiple corporations to oversee the linen industry rather than a single national body, with a president and board of directors in each county as well as one for Dublin. Spinning schools were to be set up for every forty children in each county, where they could be educated, catechized, employed, and ultimately apprenticed. All weavers had to register with their respective corporations and follow standard measures for reels of flax mandated throughout Ireland. The corporations’ methods were to be more coercive than those in the 1695 scheme, with a wide array of fines for counterfeiting their seals and marks and for breaking into their bleaching yards. To encourage domestic industry, competing imports would be taxed while exports would remain duty-free.Footnote 47

The bill went through its committee stages in the Irish parliament between 3 and 16 September 1697 but final approval still had to come from England.Footnote 48 Under the provisions of Poynings’ Law as it had been revived after the Restoration, Irish MPs proposed heads of bills to the English privy council; if the privy council accepted a bill, it would be returned to the Irish parliament for a final vote without further amendment.Footnote 49 Because the measures in Hamilton’s bill concerned the political economy of Ireland and England, the Board of Trade would have to advise the English privy council on the proposed legislation. Both Locke and Somers thereby became implicated in its fate.

On 11 September 1697, Locke – no doubt concerned about his own recommendations, which had just been dispatched from London to the Irish lords justices in Dublin – again asked Molyneux ‘how the linen manufacture goes on, on that side the water, and what assistance the parliament there is like to give to it, for I wish prosperity to your country’.Footnote 50 For his part, Molyneux wondered what might happen to the new linen bill when it reached England. He was aware that the privy council would seek the Board of Trade’s advice and that Locke would review it. ‘You will find … that we have framed a Bill to be Enacted for the Encouragement’ of the Irish linen manufacture, Molyneux wrote to Locke on 4 October 1697: ‘This Bill is now before the Council of England pursuant to our Constitution of Parliament.’ In the knowledge that his friend would soon ‘have the Consideration and Modelling thereof at your Committee of Trade’, he introduced Hamilton – ‘an Indefatigable Promotor of this Designe … the whole Scheme is owing to his Contrivance’ – to Locke as ‘an harty admirer of Yours’; he also enclosed an ‘Abstract’ of the 1697 bill that Hamilton had provided ‘purposely for [Locke’s] satisfaction’.Footnote 51

Molyneux noted that ‘some papers’ from ‘your Board’ had just reached Dublin, presumably including Locke’s report, though Molyneux could not then have known his friend was the author, nor did Locke ever tell him.Footnote 52 The Irish parliamentary committee studying the bill took almost a week to consider ‘the Proposalls of the Commissioners of Trade’ before the Irish lords justices transmitted a revised bill to London, adding such ‘further Clauses … out of the Proposalls transmitted from England as should be thought necessary’.Footnote 53 On 15 October 1697, the earl of Galway dispatched the bill from Dublin to Whitehall for conciliar scrutiny; on 28 October, the English lords justices remitted a copy to the Board of Trade for its advice.Footnote 54 That copy reached the board on the 30th.Footnote 55

The 1697 Irish linen bill proved more divisive than its 1695 predecessor. It helped to break the earlier alliance between Hamilton and Brewster and the Ulster and Munster interests in parliament that they respectively represented: as Brewster later testified to the board, ‘he was in the House of Commons … when the said Bill was brought in, but did not approve it’.Footnote 56 The main point of contention was whether a single corporation would be ‘the most Effectual Means for making the Manufactures Nationall’ (as the 1695 bill had proposed) or if multiple county corporations should be set up instead (as the 1697 legislation mandated). In the letter that Hamilton relayed to Locke via Molyneux, Hamilton admitted that he was ‘apprehensive that Sir Francis may make a stir in England about the same thing’ and attempted to head off Brewster’s objections. ‘Now if the Corporations to be Errected by the present Bill are Capable of ingroseing or Cramping thereof’, as Brewster and his ally the Belfast merchant and MP Thomas Knox (c. 1640–1728) alleged, then the 1695 scheme had been ‘much more Subject to Objections’. Hamilton argued that multiple corporations would in fact be less open to charges of monopoly; gentry interests would safeguard the new bill; and the corporations proposed in 1697 were primarily set up ‘to put the Laws concerning the Manufactures in Execution’, while in 1695 ‘the Corporation was chiefly employed in the Merchandizing part’ of the enterprise.Footnote 57 Molyneux informed Locke that Hamilton had rebutted Brewster ‘at the Council Board’ in Dublin but both men wanted to forewarn Locke against Brewster, ‘for we judge, this whole matter will come under the Consideration of your Council of trade’.Footnote 58 Their concerns proved well founded.

Brewster travelled from Dublin to London, carrying copies of ‘the Bills now transmitted’, to promote an updated version of the ‘Scheme of 1695’ in place of the 1697 legislation.Footnote 59 He went with the backing of the lord chancellor of Ireland, John Methuen (1650–1706), who recommended Brewster to his highest contacts in England, including Somers. Methuen informed Somers that Brewster was soon ‘going to have the happyness of waiting on you’ and ‘will be able to inform your Lordship of every thing you will desire to know’ regarding recent affairs in the Irish parliament.Footnote 60 Brewster reached London in the third week of October 1697 and soon called on Somers to discuss the updated 1695 bill, the Board of Trade’s recent report, and the 1697 bill. Somers was then living at Powis House (later Newcastle House), the lord keeper’s residence on the north-western corner of Lincoln’s Inn Fields, just a few hundred metres from Locke’s lodgings at the time with Robert Pawling in Little Lincoln’s Inn Fields (on what is now Carey Street).Footnote 61 That physical proximity explains why so few letters survive between Locke and Somers in 1697.Footnote 62 One brief note does remain from the last week of October 1697, in which Somers wrote to Locke,

I desire you would please to deliver Sir Francis Brewsters Paper to the Bearer [presumably a servant of Somers’s], Because [Brewster] will deferr no longer his speaking to mee upon it. He has said so often that the proposal sent from England about the linnen manufacture was impracticable in some parts of it that I wish you thought it fit to speak with him upon that subject.

Somers ended with his own niggling objection to Locke’s plan: ‘it would please better if the double Wheel had another name then Mr Firmins’.Footnote 63 The ‘proposal sent from England’ was Locke’s report to the Board of Trade, though Brewster would not have known its authorship; ‘Sir Francis Brewsters Paper’ was almost certainly the copy of the 1695 Irish linen bill now in the miscellany at the British Library alongside Locke’s comments.

Locke’s ‘Remarks’ offered a running commentary on what he saw as the key weaknesses of the 1695 bill, an accounting of its likely adverse consequences, and an implicit defence of his own report on the Irish linen industry a few weeks earlier. He carefully tallied underlying costs and outgoing expenses and queried missing information, for example regarding the current price of flax, hemp, and linen yarn in Ireland. He questioned whether the gentry and farmers should have to provide flax like everyone else in Ireland and deemed the provision for maintaining ‘pore children’ particularly misplaced. In line with his own plans for exploiting child labour in Ireland as well as in England, in the draft representation on the English poor law he presented to the Board of Trade on 26 October 1697, he argued that ‘children are able to get more than their lively hood’ and provided ‘a good oportunity of gain to the company’.Footnote 64 His main criticisms flagged the high costs for England of any proposed unitary national corporation and the correspondingly low risks for its directors: Locke calculated that the company would be liable only for £690, enough to cover the cost of prizes for the best weavers over thirty years, while the English would have to put up £300,000 of founding capital, roughly equivalent to £46 million at late 2024 prices.Footnote 65

Pace Somers, Locke believed that adopting Firmin’s double wheel would spur productivity more than prizes alone, with quantity not quality the overall goal. He also suspected that a single corporation would corruptly funnel large annual salaries to the county commissioners it had selected, as well as to the general commissioners appointed by the Irish parliament: ‘A well contrived cover to skreen the company if they have a minde to play tricks’. Locke judged that all the bill’s provisions unaccountably benefited the company and its directors, not the linen industry or, by implication, the Irish people or economic relations between England and Ireland. His conclusion was damning: ‘I see noe obligation on the company to promote the linin manifacture any more than will turne to their advantage … and those who are managers may noe doubt vijs et modis [by ways and means] make great profit to themselves.’Footnote 66 In the face of such withering criticism, the revised 1695 proposals transmitted by Brewster had little chance of prevailing in the battle of the bills.

It is most likely that Locke wrote the ‘Remarks’ in the third week of October 1697, in response to Somers’s note. With Locke’s comments on ‘Sir Francis Brewsters Paper’ to hand, Somers would have been able to respond in an informed way when Brewster pressed the 1695 ‘Scheme’ upon him in place of Hamilton’s 1697 bill. Somers likely then tucked Locke’s notes inside the copy of the bill before filing both documents together. Later, he compiled them in the miscellany ‘relating to matters of State and Policy’, which contained further documentation concerning Ireland in the 1690s and other material discussed at the Board of Trade.Footnote 67 The 1695 bill and Locke’s reactions to it then remained together for the next three centuries.

On 11 November 1697, Brewster appeared before the board to attack the latest linen bill from Ireland. He forcefully judged Hamilton’s plan for incorporation ‘to be rather prejudicial than helpfull to that Manufacture’, worrying that any funds raised to support the project would be ‘perverted by the Justices of the Peace and not imployed to the uses directed’, and counselling that penalties for defaulters would backfire: ‘people will not be brought to apply themselves to any Manufacture by Terrour, but by rewards and profit’. He told the board that he ‘with some others had some while ago prepared a Bill to the same purpose, which he thought would have been more effectual but that they could not get it past’; he then summarized the 1695 bill and, ‘for the better understanding of this Project, … promised to send their Lordships a Draught of this Bill it self tomorrow morning’.Footnote 68

The next day, Brewster delivered ‘a Draught of the Act which he spoke of yesterday for setting up the Linnen Manufacture in Ireland’ to the board’s secretary and asked them to make a copy before returning the original to him.Footnote 69 Brewster independently argued that English legislation regulating imports from Ireland, together with various inducements for the individual manufacture of linen in Ireland, could gradually smother the Irish woollen industry, relieve poverty there, and spur Irish enterprise, so ‘that the Linnen Spinning will appear in the Country with Garlands when the Woollen will be in Shakels [shackles]’. Although Locke passed his copy of the 1695 bill back to Somers, he retained a copy of Brewster’s ‘project for the Linin Manifacture’ among his papers.Footnote 70

The board had discussed the 1697 bill as amended by the Irish lords justices over the course of eight meetings between 1 and 11 November 1697.Footnote 71 They then compiled a representation on the matter to the English lords justices, including a series of further amendments to the bill, mostly designed to confine its time horizon (from ‘for ever’ to twenty-one years) and to refine its system of rewards and punishments.Footnote 72 On 11 November, every member of the board signed that report, ‘except only Mr Locke, who declared that he differed from their Lordships in his Opinion about that Bill and excused himself from signing the said Representation’, the only occasion in his four years on the board that Locke dissented from one of its collective representations.Footnote 73 On 15 November, William III returned in triumph to London from the Netherlands at the end of the Nine Years’ War; three days later, the English privy council informed the Irish lords justices that the 1697 bill, even in amended form, was ‘so farr from Answering the Design exprest in the Title that if it should pass into a Law, it would prove a totall Discouragement to the Effectual setting up of the Linnen Manufacture in Ireland’. The first signatory from the privy council was ‘J. Sommers C[hancellor].’Footnote 74 The presence of the ‘Remarks’ among Somers’s papers suggests that he and Locke had co-ordinated their responses on the Board of Trade and the privy council, based on a long-standing relationship in which Somers provided patronage (including Locke’s position on the board) and Locke supplied political and economic counsel in return.Footnote 75 The 1697 bill was dead and neither it nor its predecessor from 1695 was sent back to the Irish House of Commons.

The ‘Remarks’ reveal Locke, in tandem with Somers, operating behind the scenes to protect his own plan to reorganize commercial relations between Ireland and England by scuppering both the revived 1695 bill promoted by Brewster and the 1697 bill that Molyneux had pressed upon him. ‘It will not be at all necessary to say anything to you concerning the [1697] linen bill’, Locke informed Molyneux in January 1698: ‘You know (I believe) as well as I what became of that bill.’ The bill’s fate was indeed clear to both of them, though Molyneux hardly knew ‘as well as’ Locke how it had met its doom in committee. Locke thanked Hamilton, via Molyneux, for thinking he might have been ‘able to serve his country in that matter’ and recalled that Molyneux mentioned he had ‘seen the proposals for an act sent from hence’. Those proposals were, of course, Locke’s own, in the report that he had submitted to the board. He trusted that Molyneux and Hamilton would now promote that project in place of the recent bill: ‘The short is, I mightily have it upon my heart to get the linen manufacture established in a flourishing way in your country’, Locke wrote – but only on his own terms.Footnote 76

The ‘Remarks’ show that in late 1697 Locke was not worried ‘that the financial provision for the [Irish linen] industry was inadequate’, that the promoters of the Irish legislation ‘wished to profit from stock-jobbing’, or that Irish linen manufacture would ‘simply degenerate into a stock-jobbing bonanza’.Footnote 77 He was more concerned that the financial provision for the industry would be excessively draining for England; that the corporation’s directors would corruptly shield themselves from accountability; and that they would selfishly profiteer from the corporation’s revenues, rather than its stock. Such matters were evidently much on his mind in October 1697, when, in correspondence with the Baltic merchant Samuel Heathcote (1656–1708), he similarly objected to overseas trading companies on the grounds that they ‘may lay Extravagant Impositions[,] raise a great Stock[,] divide the money among themselves or amongst those that Govern and so the money they raise be made no ways usefull to the publick but Spent to Feast and Enrich private Persons’.Footnote 78

The ‘Remarks’ were also consistent with Locke’s reports to the Board of Trade in the autumn of 1697: on the English poor law and on Irish linen manufacture. Those reports, like the ‘Remarks’, advanced public improvement over private profit, promoted Firmin’s double-handed wheel, and put young children to productive work, all within ‘a strategy for economic development centered on invigorating proto-industries’ in both England and Ireland.Footnote 79 Legislation on Irish linen manufacture would not return until 1699, when, after Tory victory in the general election, the wool lobby successfully pressed the English parliament to pass the punitive Irish Woollen Act (10 William III, c. 16) under radically changed political circumstances.Footnote 80 Locke and Somers may have won a battle over Anglo-Irish political economy in 1697 but the 1699 Woollen Act confirmed that they ultimately lost the war.Footnote 81

IV

Editorial conventions. The transcription retains the manuscript’s original spelling, capitalization, and punctuation, with the following exceptions. Manuscript forms of words such as ‘ye’, ‘yt’, ‘agn’, ‘wch’, and ‘Pr’ have been expanded or replaced with the usual printed forms. Strikethroughs indicate Locke’s deletions. Angle brackets indicate his substitutions and his additions on the line, caret marks his additions above the line, and square brackets an editorial expansion or addition. The bill itself had no paragraph numbers: Locke supplied them in his own hand for his and Somers’s ease of reference. He keyed each of his comments to the relevant sections of the bill by the paragraph numbers in the left-hand column. Footnotes record the detailed provisions of the 1695 bill to which Locke refers in each of his remarks.

Transcription. British Library, Add. MS 27,382, fos. 10r–11v.

[fo. 10r]

§

  1. 3 The money ^£300.000^ designed to be raised in EnglandFootnote 82

  1. 6 100.000 subscribed shall constitute the CompanyFootnote 83

  1. 7 £1000 of the originall stock to be laid out in each county for purchaseing Lands building workeing houses erecting bleacherys &c for carying on the Manifacture

    one Moietie of the said £51.000 to be laid thus out within 18 Months after the company takes place. & the other Moietie within the next 18 monthsFootnote 84

    NB This cannot but be disproportionate to the end for one County may need £200.000 to be laid out in it to this purpose, when in an other county it would be madnesse to lay out one hundred pounds

  1. 8 Q what is the value, at the midle rate, of marchantable flax in Ireland.Footnote 85 If it be 4d Then every person ^male^ will pay yearly to the company 2s−4d if it be 3¼ every male will pay 7d. The same Q upon the Spangles of Linin yarne.Footnote 86 By § 14 each spangle of yarne is valued at 6d <but in the valuation of the flax there I can finde noe proportion>Footnote 87

    Q who shall be judg whether the linen yarne be well spun & even sized

  1. 10 Q What well dressd hemp is worth per pound in IrelandFootnote 88

    These 3 taxes may amount to a great yearly sum

    Q Whether it be not improper for country Gent[lemen] & farmers to be obleigd to bring in dressed hemp? The [fo. 10v] incouragement for sowing of hemp ^& flax^ would be greater to make their payments only in rough hemp & flax.

  1. 14 This maintenance for pore children a good oportunity of gain to the companyFootnote 89

  1. 16 Large priviledgesFootnote 90

17

18

  1. 19 They are to take in children of 6400 at 7 years old & keep them to 21.Footnote 91 There needs noe allowance faor this, for such children are able to get more than their lively hood

  1. 20 Q What chardges This is all the charge I see the company is obleiged to be at for encourageing the Linin woollen manifacture viz £690.Footnote 92 Though their income by the contribution of Flax Hemp & yarne be many thousands. Besides this incouragement is misplaced. since it should be more to introduce the double wheele than reward weavers though that too should not be neglectedFootnote 93

  1. 22 £3000 per annum to ^county^ commissioners of their owne chooseing to inspect &c.Footnote 94

  1. 23.24 And £1200 to 3 General Commissioners to be chosen by the Parliament.Footnote 95 A well contrived cover to skreen the company if they have a minde to play tricks

    [fo. 11r]

  1. 25 And £200 more for the rewarding the 12 best we webs. This is again for shew, & rewar incourages only weavers & that in makeing fine cloth, which is not the businesse in the beginingFootnote 96

  1. 28 Q Whether this power of makeing by laws be like to be made use of more for the advantage of the Company or of the Manifacture.Footnote 97

    I see noe obligation on the company to promote the linin manifacture any more than will turne to their advantage though they have great rewards given them ^without account^ & those who are managers may noe doubt vijs et modisFootnote 98 make great profit to themselves

[fo. 11v]

Lo. [inverted]

Acknowledgements

For their comments and assistance, I am especially grateful to Daniel Carey, Mark Goldie, David Hayton, Patrick Kelly, Quentin Skinner, and Felix Waldmann.

Competing interests

The author declares none.

References

1 The National Archives (TNA), CO 391/9, fo. 5r (25 June 1696); Peter Laslett, ‘John Locke, the great recoinage, and the origins of the Board of Trade: 1695–1698’, in John Yolton, ed., John Locke: problems and perspectives (Cambridge, 1969), p. 137 (misdating the first meeting to 26 June 1696); Sir William Trumbull to John Locke, 17 [Dec.] 1695, in E. S. de Beer and Mark Goldie, eds., The correspondence of John Locke (9 vols. to date, Oxford, 1986–2023), v, p. 485.

2 ‘His Majesties Commission for promoting the Trade of the Kingdom and for Inspecting and Improving His Plantations in America and Elsewhere’ (15 May 1696), TNA, CO 391/9, fos. 2r–4v; printed in D. C. Douglas and Andrew Browning, eds., English historical documents, 1660–1714 (London, 1966), pp. 537–9, and summarized by John Freke and Edward Clarke to Locke, 17 Dec. 1695, in Correspondence of John Locke, v, pp. 486–7.

3 Edward Raymond Turner, ‘The lords justices of England’, English Historical Review, 19 (1914), pp. 453–76, at pp. 453–5; Correspondence of John Locke, ix, pp. xxvii–viii.

4 TNA, CO 391/13, fos. 47v–48r; CO 391/94, fo. 248r.

5 Locke attended board meetings, with only occasional exceptions, from 25 June to 13 Nov. 1696, 13 to 17 Feb. 1697, 21 June to 26 Nov. 1697, 11 July to 20 Oct. 1698, 6 June to 22 Nov. 1699, and 14 May to 28 June 1700: TNA, CO 391/9, fos. 5r, 115v, 201r, 204r; CO 391/10, fos. 64r, 178r; CO 391/11, fos. 61v, 128v; CO 391/12, fos. 31v, 130r; CO 391/13, fos. 21v, 47v. He did not sign documents during his periods of absence.

6 ‘Answer of the Commissioners of Trade and Plantations to the Honourable the House of Commons’, 22 Mar. 1700, Bodleian Library, Oxford (Bodl.), MS Locke c. 30, fos. 119v, 120r; TNA, CO 391/10, fo. 206r. Locke was absent from the board in March 1700 and did not sign the commissioners’ ‘Answer’, although in the copy cited here, among Locke’s surviving papers, most of the projects he had worked on are underlined, probably by Locke himself.

7 Hugh Kearney, ‘The political background to English mercantilism, 1695–1700’, Economic History Review, n.s. 11 (1959), pp. 484–96; Patrick Kelly, ‘The Irish Woollen Export Prohibition Act of 1699: Kearney re-visited’, Irish Economic and Social History, 7 (1980), pp. 22–44.

8 ‘Answer of the Commissioners of Trade and Plantations’, Bodl., MS Locke c. 30, fo. 120r.

9 [John Locke], Report of the Board of Trade on the Irish linen industry, 31 Aug. 1697, TNA, CO 389/40, pp. 45–67; British Library (BL), MS Harley 1324, fos. 22r–32r; The journals of the House of Commons (England) (12 vols., London, 1803–13), xii, pp. 427–30. The Harleian manuscript was first printed as Locke’s in H. R. Fox Bourne, The life of John Locke (2 vols., London, 1876), ii, pp. 363–72.

10 J. R. Milton and Philip Milton, ‘Selecting the grand jury: a tract by John Locke’, Historical Journal, 40 (1997), pp. 185–94; Mark Knights, ‘John Locke and post-revolutionary politics: electoral reform and the franchise’, Past and Present, 213 (Nov. 2011), pp. 41–86; J. C. Walmsley and Felix Waldmann, ‘John Locke and the toleration of Catholics: a new manuscript’, Historical Journal, 62 (2019), pp. 1093–1115; Mark Goldie, ‘John Locke on the Glorious Revolution: a new document’, History of Political Thought, 52 (2021), pp. 74–97; Felix Waldmann, ‘New manuscript fragments by John Locke’, Notes and Queries, 68 (2021), pp. 207–12; J. C. Walmsley and Felix Waldmann, ‘John Locke, toleration, and Samuel Parker’s A discourse of ecclesiastical politie (1669): a new manuscript’, Modern Intellectual History, 19 (2022), pp. 997–1032.

11 Journals of the House of Commons of the kingdom of Ireland (29 vols., Dublin, 1782–95), ii, pp. 600, 606, 625; Irish Legislation Database, bill no. 1702, https://www.qub.ac.uk/ild/?func=display_bill&id=579 (accessed 31 Jan. 2025). Hamilton of Tollymore was a member of the Irish parliament in 1692–3 and 1695–9: Edith Mary Johnston-Liik, History of the Irish parliament, 16921800 (6 vols., Belfast, 2002), iv, pp. 339–40; Correspondence of John Locke, vi, p. 221, n. 2.

12 BL, Add. MS 27,382, fos. 10r–11v.

13 ‘Historical and other tracts’, BL, Add. MS 27,382; Walter Scott, ed., A collection of scarce and valuable tracts … of the late Lord Somers (13 vols., London, 1809–15); William L. Sachse, Lord Somers: a political portrait (Madison, WI, 1975), p. 196. The latest dated piece in the Somers miscellany is the ‘Memorial to the queen by the duke of Atholl…’, 18 Jan. 1704, BL, Add. MS 27,382, fos. 98r–101v.

14 ‘Catalogue of Lord Somers’ MSS’, BL, MS Harley 7191, fo. 144v: ‘MS Miscell. relating to matters of State and Policy … Liber 30’; ‘Papers relating to the division of Lord Somers’s library between the master of the rolls [Sir Joseph Jekyll] and the attorney-general [Philip Yorke]’, BL, Add. MS 36,116, fos. 172r–207v.

15 John Whiston, A catalogue of valuable manuscripts in Greek, Latin, English, French, Italian, and Spanish … all which were collected at the expence of the late Lord Somers, and since belonged to the Right Hon. Sir Joseph Jekyll Knt. master of the rolls, lately deceased (London, [1739]), p. 18, item 333: ‘Miscellanies, MSS. Folio, lib 30’; ‘This bought out of Ld. Somers’ Collection, 1 March, 1738 [i.e., 1739], pretio 0-7-6’, (in a different hand) ‘by Paul Jodrell Esqr., of Sion Hill. Middx.’, BL, Add. MS 27,382, fo. 1r.

16 Debrett’s baronetage of England (6th edn, 2 vols., London, 1828), ii, p. 422; W. P. Baildon et al., eds., The records of the honourable society of Lincoln’s Inn: the black books (6 vols., London, 1897–2001), iii, pp. 212, 291, 310, 315, 325, 329; last will and testament of Paul Jodrell of Sion Hill, Middlesex, 31 Mar. 1743, TNA, PROB 11/731/267. Pace John Gibney, ‘A discourse of Ireland, 1695’, Irish Historical Studies, 34 (2005), pp. 449–61, at p. 449, the purchaser in 1739 could not have been Jodrell’s father, Paul Jodrell senior (clerk of the House of Commons, 1683–1727), as he died in 1728.

17 Robert M. Adams, ‘In search of Baron Somers’, in Perez Zagorin, ed., Culture and politics from puritanism to the Enlightenment (Berkeley, CA, 1980), pp. 166, 193, n. 5.

18 BL, Add. MS 27,382, fo. 2r (‘About the linnen manufacture in Ireland’); BL, MS Harley 7191, fo. 144v (‘2. About the linnen manufacture in Ireland’).

19 ‘The Trustees of the British Museum/Bought of Mr Henry Stevens/1 Folio Volume of MSS from Lord Somers Collection’, 6 June 1866, Letter- and Account-Books, vol. 17: 1865–1866, fo. 449r, William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan, Henry Stevens papers, box 5 (my thanks to David Hancock for this reference); ‘Purchased of Mr Henry Stevens/23 June 1866’, BL, Add. MS 27,382, flyleaf; Catalogue of additions to the manuscripts in the British Museum in the Years MDCCCLIV–MDCCCLXXV, vol. ii: Additional MSS. 24,027–29,909 (London, 1877), pp. 309–10.

20 The watermark, containing a capital letter ‘A’, conforms to none of the examples in Edward Heawood, Watermarks, mainly of the 17th and 18th centuries (Hilversum, 1950); W. A. Churchill, Watermarks in paper in Holland, England, France (Amsterdam, 1967); or the Gravell Watermark Archive, https://memoryofpaper.eu/gravell/ (accessed 31 Jan. 2025).

21 BL, Add. MS 27,382, fos. 7r–9v, 12r–19v; Richard J. Hayes, ed., Manuscript sources for the history of Irish civilisation (11 vols., Boston, MA, 1965), ii, p. 165.

22 Conrad Gill, The rise of the Irish linen industry (Oxford, 1925), p. v. The second copy of the 1695 bill, ‘Project of an act to be past in Ireland for setting up the linnen manufacture in that kingdom’, survives among the Board of Trade papers: TNA, CO 388/85 (A21). It was submitted to the board by Sir Francis Brewster on 11 Nov. 1697: TNA, CO 389/40, p. 78.

23 Generally, see Richard Yeo, ‘Queries in early-modern English science’, Intellectual History Review, 32 (2022), pp. 553–73.

24 [John Locke], ‘Reasons for tolerateing Papists equally with others’, 1667–8, in Waldmann and Walmsley, ‘John Locke and the toleration of Catholics’, pp. 1111–15; ‘The fundamental constitutions of Carolina’, 21 July 1669, TNA, PRO 30/24/47/3, fo. 1r; ‘The fundamental constitutions of Carolina’, 12 Jan. 1682, New York Public Library, *KC + 1682 Carolina; John Locke, ‘Pensilvania laws’, ‘The frame of the government of Pensylvania’, Nov. 1686, Bodl., MS Locke f. 9, pp. 33–7, 38–41; [John Locke], ‘New Yorke representation’ [Sept. 1696], ‘Pyracy 97’ (1697), ‘Ireland 97 Collis’ (1697), and ‘Darien’ [1700], all in Bodl., MS Locke c. 30, fos. 40r, 63r, 82r, 125r, respectively.

25 John Locke, ‘Méthode nouvelle de dresser des recueils’, Bibliothèque universelle et historique, 2 (1686), pp. 315–40; Richard Yeo, Notebooks, English virtuosi, and early modern science (Chicago, IL, 2014), pp. 175–214; Anthony Grafton and Lisa Jardine, ‘“Studied for action”: how Gabriel Harvey read his Livy’, Past and Present, 129 (Nov. 1990), pp. 30–78.

26 Jane H. Ohlmeyer, ed., Political thought in seventeenth-century Ireland: kingdom or colony (Cambridge, 2000).

27 Journals of the Council for [Trade and] Foreign Plantations (1673–4), Phillipps MS 8539, pt 1, p. 56 (second pagination), 13 Nov. 1673, Library of Congress, Washington, DC; Kelly, ‘The Irish Woollen Export Prohibition Act’, 24. Compare John Locke, ‘For a generall naturalization’ (1693), in Patrick Hyde Kelly, ed., Locke on Money (2 vols., Oxford, 1991), ii, pp. 488–9.

28 Gill, Rise of the Irish linen industry, pp. 7–9.

29 ‘Instructions to Lord Capell as lord deputy and governor-general of Ireland’, 5 May 1695, in William John Hardy, ed., Calendar of state papers domestic: William and Mary, 1694–5 (London, 1906), p. 457.

30 Journals of the House of Commons of the kingdom of Ireland, ii, p. 546. Brewster was a member of the Irish parliament in 1692–3, 1695–9, and 1703–5: Johnston-Liik, History of the Irish parliament, 1692–1800, iii, pp. 261–2; Francis Brewster, Essays on trade and navigation. In five parts (London, 1695); [Francis Brewster], A discourse concerning Ireland and the different interests thereof; in answer to the Exon and Barnstaple petitions (London, 1698).

31 Irish Legislation Database, bill no. 1702; Journals of the House of Commons of the kingdom of Ireland, ii, pp. 606 (27 Nov. 1695), 625 (7 Dec. 1695).

32 James Hamilton to William Molyneux, 13 Oct. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, vi, pp. 230, 231.

33 ‘Heads of a bill for encouraging linen and hemp manufacture in Ireland’, BL, Add. MS 27,382, fos. 7r–9v, 12r–19v; W. R. Scott, The constitution and finance of English, Scottish, and Irish joint-stock companies to 1720 (3 vols., London, 1904), iii, pp. 100–1.

34 Lord Capell to Sir John Somers, 6 Oct. 1695, and Capell to Somers, 9 Nov. 1695, Surrey History Centre, Woking, Surrey, 371/14/F/12; 371/14/F/15. In transmitting Hamilton’s letter of 13 Oct. 1697 to Locke, Molyneux added an explanatory note that ‘the Shcheme’ had been ‘Offered to my Lord Capell in 1695’ ‘by Sir Fr. Brewster’: Correspondence of John Locke, vi, p. 230, n. b. Brewster himself told the Board of Trade that he ‘with some others had some while ago prepared a Bill … which he thought would have been more effectuall but that they could not get it passed’: Sir Francis Brewster to Board of Trade, 11 Nov. 1697, TNA, CO 391/10, fo. 172v.

35 Journals of the House of Commons of the kingdom of Ireland, ii, pp. 653, 657; Votes of the House of Commons [of Ireland], 31 July 1697 (Dublin, 1697), TNA, SP 63/359, fo. 89v.

36 ‘An Act for Encourageing the Linen Manufacture of Ireland and Bringing Flax and Hemp into and the Making of Sail Cloth in This Kingdome’ (7 & 8 William III, c. 39): John Raithby, ed., The statutes of the realm (11 vols., [London], 1808–20), vii, p. 156; Journals of the House of Commons (England), xi, p. 561.

37 Locke to William Molyneux, 12 Sept. 1696, and Molyneux to Locke, 26 Sept. 1696, in Correspondence of John Locke, v, pp. 699, 703–4 and n. 2; John Locke, ‘Linnin/97’, Bodl., MS Locke c. 30, fo. 70v; ‘Act to Encourage the Planting and Sowing of Hemp and Flax’ (17 & 17 Charles II, c. 9), in Journals of the House of Commons (England), viii, p. 63; W. R. Scott, ‘The King’s and Queen’s Corporation for the Linen Manufacture in Ireland’, Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, 5th ser., 31 (1901), pp. 371–8.

38 Molyneux was the member for Trinity College Dublin in 1692–3 and 1695–8: Johnston-Liik, History of the Irish parliament, v, pp. 266–8.

39 Trumbull to Board of Trade, 20 Apr. 1697, TNA, CO 391/10, fo. 41r–v.

40 Sir Francis Brewster’s presentation to the Board of Trade, 29 Apr. 1697, TNA, CO 391/10, fos. 44r–45r.

41 TNA, CO 391/10, fo. 104r (17 Aug. 1697); Kearney, ‘Political background to English mercantilism’, pp. 487–8; Kelly, ‘The Irish Woollen Export Prohibition Act’, p. 30.

42 Philip Bayley to George Stead, 21 Aug. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, ix, p. 298. For Locke’s contemporaneous notes on linen manufacture, see ‘Linnin 97’, Bodl., MS Locke c. 30, fos. 70r –75r.

43 TNA, CO 391/10, fos. 107v–108r, 113v, 116v.

44 Thomas Firmin, Some proposals for the imployment of the poor, and for the prevention of idleness and the consequence thereof (London, 1681); Firmin’s presentation to the Board of Trade, 14 Aug. 1696, TNA, CO 391/9, fos. 27r–28r; [Thomas Firmin?] to [Locke?], [8 or 9 Apr. 1697?], in Correspondence of John Locke, vi, p. 84; John Marshall, ‘London, Locke, and the 1690s provisions for the poor in context: beggars, spinners, and slaves’, in Justin Champion, John Coffey, Tim Harris, and John Marshall, eds., Politics, religion and ideas in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Britain: essays in honour of Mark Goldie (Woodbridge, 2019), pp. 192–3.

45 [Locke], Report of the Board of Trade on the Irish linen industry, TNA, CO 389/40, pp. 45–67; BL, MS Harley 1324, fos. 22r–32r. For a summary of Locke’s report by another member of the Board of Trade, see [Abraham Hill,] ‘[F]or the incouragement of the linnen manufacture in Irel.’, 1697, BL, MS Sloane 2902, fo. 131r.

46 Journals of the House of Commons of the kingdom of Ireland, ii, p. 685; Votes of the House of Commons [of Ireland], 26 Aug. 1697 (Dublin, 1697), TNA, SP 63/359, fo. 195r. On the same day, the duke of Shrewsbury had written to the earl of Galway wishing ‘some Bill that would effectually encourage the linen manufacture were in such forwardness that it might be perfected this Session. It would be of great advantage to England as well as Ireland’: duke of Shrewsbury to earl of Galway, 26 Aug. 1697, in Historical Manuscripts Commission (HMC), Report on the manuscripts of the duke of Buccleuch & Queensberry, K.G., K.T., preserved at Montagu House, Whitehall (3 vols., London, 1903), ii, p. 543.

47 ‘Abstract of an act for encouraging the linnen and hempen manufacture’, 26 Aug. 1697, TNA, CO 388/85 (A22). For a summary, see ‘Linin manifacture in Ireland/97’, Bodl., MS Locke, c. 30, fos. 67r–68r.

48 Journals of the House of Commons of the kingdom of Ireland, ii, pp. 697, 701, 715, 719.

49 David Hayton, ‘Introduction: the long apprenticeship’, Parliamentary History, 20 (2001), pp. 1–26, at pp. 9–10, 11; Charles Ivar McGrath, ‘Government, parliament and the constitution: the reinterpretation of Poynings’ Law, 1692–1714’, Irish Historical Studies, 35 (2006), pp. 160–72, at pp. 163–4, 167–8, 170; James Kelly, Poynings’ Law and the making of law in Ireland, 1660–1800 (Dublin, 2007), pp. 94–100 (on the 1697 Irish Parliament).

50 Locke to Molyneux, 11 Sept. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, vi, p. 191. The Irish chancellor of the exchequer, Philip Savage, presented ‘some Papers Relating to the said Linnen Manufacture’, presumably including Locke’s report, to the Irish House of Commons on 15 Sept. 1697: Votes of the House of Commons [of Ireland], 15 Sept. 1697 (Dublin, 1697), TNA, SP 63/359, fo. 262v.

51 Molyneux to Locke, 4 Oct. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, vi, pp. 220, 221; William John Hardy, ed., Calendar of state papers domestic: William III, 1697 (London, 1927), pp. 345 (2 Sept. 1697), 364 (11 Sept. 1697). ‘Linin manifacture in Ireland/97’, Bodl., MS Locke c. 30, fos. 67r–68r, is inferentially the ‘Inclosed Abstract’ that Molyneux passed from Hamilton to Locke.

52 Molyneux to Locke, 4 Oct. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, vi, p. 221.

53 Marquis of Winchester to Shrewsbury and Galway to Shrewsbury, 18 and 22 Sept. 1697, TNA, SP 63/359, fos. 270r, 282r; Journals of the House of Commons of the kingdom of Ireland, ii, p. 727 (21 Sept. 1697); Winchester and Galway to lords justices, 14 Oct. 1697, TNA, SP 63/359, fo. 340r.

54 Galway to Shrewsbury, 15 Oct. 1697, in HMC, Report on the manuscripts of the duke of Buccleuch & Queensberry, ii, pt 2, p. 564; lords justices of England to Board of Trade, 28 Oct. 1697, TNA, CO 388/85 (A20); TNA, CO 389/40, p. 77.

55 Board of Trade minutes, 30 Oct. 1697, TNA, CO 391/10, fo. 166r–v.

56 Brewster to Board of Trade, 11 Nov. 1697, TNA, CO 391/10, fo. 172v; D. W. Hayton, ‘Plantation and politics in Williamite Ireland’, Studia Hibernica, 48 (2022), pp. 13–35, at pp. 24–35.

57 James Hamilton to Molyneux, 13 Oct. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, vi, pp. 230–1. Thomas Knox was a member of the Irish parliament in 1692–3, 1695–9, 1703–14, and 1715–27: Johnston-Liik, History of the Irish parliament, 16921800, v, p. 45.

58 Molyneux to Locke, 16 Oct. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, vi, p. 231. On 21 Sept. 1697, the Irish lords justices ordered Hamilton to attend on them: Votes of the House of Commons [Ireland], 21 Sept. 1697, TNA, SP 63/359, fo. 280r.

59 Humphrey May to Robert Gard, 23 Sept. 1697, TNA, SP 63/359, fo. 303r. Brewster’s bill notes that ‘the Parliament of England have … enact[ed] … that all the Flax and Hemp of the growth of Ireland and all the Linnen Cloth and other Manufactures thereof may be imported into that Kingdome exempt from Customs and any other Duty whatsoever’ (BL, Add. MS 27,382, fo. 8r), a reference to the ‘Act for Encourageing the Linen Manufacture of Ireland’ passed in April 1696 (7 & 8 William III, c. 39) that implies that the 1695 text had been updated in light of later events.

60 John Methuen to Somers, 6 Oct. 1697, Surrey History Centre, 371/14/F/22; see also Methuen to Shrewsbury, 8 Oct. 1697, in HMC, Report on the manuscripts of the duke of Buccleuch & Queensberry, ii, pt 2, p. 561; Methuen to unknown correspondent, 9 Oct. 1697, TNA, SP 63/359, fo. 337r.

61 Bodl., MS Locke f. 29, p. 147; Correspondence of John Locke, iv, pp. 208–10, v, pp. 88, n. 1, 291, n. 4, 440, n. 2, vi, p. 236; W. Edward Riley and Laurence Gomme, eds., Survey of London, III: the parish of St. Giles-in-the-Fields (part I): Lincoln’s Inn Fields (London, 1912), pp. 11018.

62 Three of the four surviving letters between Locke and Somers in 1697 concern Locke’s attempt early that year to resign from the board, which Somers refused: Locke to Somers, 7 Jan. 1697; Somers to Locke, 25 Jan. [1697]; Locke to Somers, 1 Feb. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, v, pp. 748–9, 757, 763–4.

63 Somers to Locke, 26 (?) Oct. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, vi, p. 236.

64 [John Locke], ‘Draught of a representation containing [a] scheme of methods for the imployment of the poor’, 26 Oct. 1697, TNA, CO 388/5, fos. 232r–248v, printed in Fox Bourne, Life of John Locke, ii, pp. 377–91; Locke, ‘Poor’ (1697), Bodl., MS Locke c. 30, fos. 86r–88r, 94r–95v.

65 Bank of England, ‘Inflation calculator’, https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/monetary-policy/inflation/inflation-calculator (accessed 31 Jan. 2025).

66 [John Locke], ‘Remarks on the bill to create the Flax and Hemp Company of Ireland’, Oct./Nov. 1697, BL, Add. MS 27,382, fos. 10r–11r.

67 ‘Of Ireland in 1695’; [Henry Hartwell, James Blair, and Edward Chilton], ‘The account of the present state and government of Virginia’, 1697, both in BL, Add. MS 27,382, fos. 3r–7, 197r–228r, respectively.

68 Testimony of Sir Francis Brewster to the Board of Trade, 11 Nov. 1697, TNA, CO 391/10, fos. 172r–73r.

69 TNA, CO 391/10, fo. 174r.

70 ‘Trade Ireland 97/Sir Francis Brewsters project for the Linin Manifacture’, Bodl., MS Locke c. 30, fos. 65r–66r (quoted); for another copy, see ‘The linen manufacture in Ireland’, in HMC, Report on the manuscripts of the duke of Buccleuch & Queensberry, ii, pt 2, pp. 742–4.

71 TNA, CO 391/10, fos. 167r, 168v, 169r–v, 170r, 171r (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10 Nov. 1697).

72 ‘Amendments annexed to the foregoing representation’, 11 Nov. 1697, TNA, CO 389/40, pp. 78–84, printed in Journals of the House of Commons, xii, pp. 431–2 (18 Jan. 1699); ‘Grounds upon which the foregoing alterations were made’, TNA, CO 389/40, pp. 84–5. Hamilton of Tollymore later responded with ‘Some observations on the amendments offered in England to the bill for encourageing the linnen manufacture in Ireland November 1697’, TNA, CO 388/85 (A26), received by the Board of Trade on 17 May 1698: TNA, CO 391/11, fo. 34r.

73 TNA, CO 391/10, fo. 173r (11 Nov. 1697).

74 English privy council to lords justices of Ireland, 18 Nov. 1697, TNA, PC 2/77, fo. 65r. Two weeks later, on 2 Dec. 1697, William III elevated Somers to the peerage as Baron Somers of Evesham: Sachse, Lord Somers, p. 129.

75 Laslett, ‘John Locke’, pp. 144–7, 151–8; Sachse, Lord Somers, pp. 105–6, 116–17, 204.

76 Locke to Molyneux, 10 Jan. 1698, in Correspondence of John Locke, vi, pp. 295–6, and ix, p. 305.

77 Patrick Kelly, ‘Locke and Molyneux: the anatomy of a friendship’, Hermathena, 126 (1979), pp. 38–54, at p. 46; Kelly, ‘The Irish Woollen Export Prohibition Act’, pp. 32–3.

78 Samuel Heathcote to Locke, 19 Oct. 1697, in Correspondence of John Locke, ix, p. 302; Samuel Heathcote, memorandum ‘concerning Companys’, 1698, Bodl. MS Locke c. 30, fos. 109r–10r; Correspondence of John Locke, v, p. 55 (headnote).

79 Lucas G. Pinheiro, ‘A factory afield: capitalism and empire in John Locke’s political economy’, Modern Intellectual History, 19 (2022), pp. 1–28, at p. 5.

80 ‘Act to Prevent the Exportation of Wool out of the Kingdoms of Ireland and England into Forreigne Parts and for the Incouragement of the Woollen Manufactures in the Kingdom of England’, 1699, in Raithby, ed., Statutes of the realm, vii, pp. 524–8.

81 Somers returned to the Irish linen manufacture a final time in 1704 with a report on Irish exportation of linen to the colonies: ‘Irish Commons address, relating to the linen manufacture, report about’, 17 Mar. 1704, in The Journals of the House of Lords (62 vols., London, 1767–1830), xviii, pp. 485–7; Sachse, Lord Somers, p. 225.

82 BL, Add. MS 27,382, fo. 8r–v: ‘diverse persons of quality in England and well wishers to this Kingdome of Ireland … are willing to joyn with such other persons of Ireland as will be alike well disposed for the welfare thereof in a society or Company for the raising 300,000 Pounds sterling for providing all things necessary for the carrying on the said Trade from this Kingdome of Ireland’ (§ numbered ‘3’ by Locke).

83 Ibid., fo. 9r: ‘Be it further Enacted that the said Corporation or Company [the Flax and Hemp Company of Ireland: ibid., fos. 8v–9r] shall be Established in all respects and purposes as soon as the summe of 100000£ shall be subscribed towards the aforesaid Fund’ (§ numbered ‘6’ by Locke).

84 Ibid., fo. 9r–v: ‘the sum of 1000£ shall be laid out and Expended in each County in this Kingdom’ (§ numbered ‘7’ by Locke).

85 Ibid., fos. 9v, 12r: ‘every Male in this Kingdome from the age of 16 to 60 excepting such that are of the Holy Orders, their Wives, Children, and Domestick servants, and all su[ch] as receive Alms from the Parish … shall from and after the first day of May which shall be in the year of Our Lord 169[blank] bring in and deliver, or cause to be brought in and delivered yearly and every year for and during the space or terme of 25 years to the aforesaid Company Undertakers or to their Assignes or Agents for that purpose appointed 28lb of good and Merchandable Flax at the rate of 3d per pound, or else 4 Spangles of good and Merchandable Linnen Flax Yarne well spun and even sized at the rate of 15d per spangle, at the choice and election of each Party’ (§ numbered ‘8’ by Locke).

86 TNA, CO 391/10, fo. 172r: ‘a certain quantity of Yarn known in Ireland’ (Sir Francis Brewster); OED, s.v. ‘spangle, n.2’: ‘Scottish and Irish English. ? Obsolete. A measure of yarn.’

87 BL, Add. MS 27,382, fo. 14r: ‘in case of default in bringing in and delivering … the said quantity or proportion for that purpose allotted to each and every Person as aforesaid the following Penalties or forefeitures shall be levied and recovered on and from each and every person making such default, that is to say, for every spangle of Yarne 6d, for every 20lb of Flax 2/-’ (§ numbered ‘14’ by Locke).

88 BL, Add. MS 27,382, fo. 12r–v: ‘every Occupier and Possessor of Land or House in this Kingdome whether he be Owner or Proprietor, or only Tennant of the same to the value of 100£ per annum shall over and above his or her proportion of Flax or Yarne also bring in and deliver, or cause to be brought in and delivered yearly and every year for and during the space or terme of 25 years to the said Company or Undertakers, or to their Assignes or Agents in that behalf deputed 200lb weight of good and Merchandable Hemp well drest and fitt to make Ropes and Cordage, and so proportionable to the greater or lesser yearly value of their respective yearly Lands or Rents, that is to say, Two Pounds of Hemp ordered as aforesaid for and in respect of every 20/- of Land or Rent yearly’ (§ numbered ‘10’ by Locke).

89 BL, Add. MS 27,382, fo. 13v: ‘all the Tythes from time to time arising and growing due upon Flax and Hemp in this Kingdome shall for the future … be paid into the aforesaid Company, or Undertakers, or to their Assigns or Agents in that behalf appointed for and toward the maintenance of poor Children’ (§ numbered ‘13’ – not, in fact, ‘14’ – by Locke).

90 Ibid., fos. 14v–15r: §§ 16, 17, and 18 (as numbered by Locke) provide, respectively, for exemption of all the company’s buildings, plant, and stock from all taxes and all officers and servants of company from impressment, other services, or detention (§16); company exemption from quartering and no protection for the company’s debtors from prosecution (§17); and the use of public funds to restore any damage to company property ‘in case of any despoiling depredations or destruction or Marching of the Enemies either forreigne or domestick’ (§18).

91 Ibid., fo. 16r–v: ‘the said Company or Undertakers shall be obliged to maintaine at and by their severall Workhouses in this Kingdome to the Number of 6400 Poor Children being delivered unto them … All which children so maintained shall remaine and continue in the service of the said Company or Undertakers till they obtaine the age of 21. years, only the Female shall be at liberty in case of Marriage’ (§ numbered ‘19’ by Locke).

92 BL, Add. MS 27,382, fo. 16v: the paragraph numbered ‘20’ by Locke provides for sums amounting to £23 to be disbursed annually, ‘To that person who makes the finest and best white Linnen Webb of 40 Yards long and one Yard broad £10 00/-00d/To him or her who shall make the best Piece of Linnen sheeting of 40 Yards long and of one Yard one quarter, and one such broad £5 0s 0d/To the maker of the best sail Canvas Diaper or Ticking £5 00/- 00d/To the Spinner of the finest Linnen Yarne, the quantity of which shall not be lesse than 5 Spangles £3 00/- 00d/£23 00/- 00d.’ Locke has here added up the sums specified in the bill to a total of £690 in prize money over thirty years.

93 The ‘double wheele’ was the invention of Thomas Firmin: see n. 44 above and BL, MS Harley 1324, fo. 25r.

94 BL, Add. MS 27,382, fos. 17r–18r: county commissioners appointed ‘by the said Company out of such of the Members of Parliament that shall inhabit the said County … shall for his or their pains and Acting in the Trust aforesaid so long as he and they shall continue so to Act, receive from the said Company or Undertakers the Annuall Sallary following, that is to say, for the first yeare to begin from Midsummer 169[blank] the summe of 25£ each, for the 2d year the summe of £50 each, and for the third yeare the summe of 75£ each, and for every ensuing year of the aforesaid terme of 25 years the summe of 100£ each’ (§ numbered ‘22’ by Locke).

95 Ibid., fo. 18r–v: three general commissioners chosen by parliament to be paid an annual salary ‘for the first yeare to commence from Midsummer 169[blank] the summe of 100£, for the 2d year the summe of 200£, the third yeare the summe of 300£, And for every succeeding year of the said Terme of 25 years, the summe of 400£’ (§ numbered ‘24’ by Locke).

96 Ibid., fo. 18v: ‘And be it further Enacted and provided that the said Company or Undertakers shall likewise pay to or cause to be lodged in the hands of the said Generall Commissioners or of any one of them, the further summe of 200£ to commence at 2 years End after this Act takes place to be then disposed of any applyed to the manner following’; §26 lists rewards for best ‘Webbs’ – i.e. ‘Woven fabric, cloth. Also: a piece of woven fabric’ (OED, s.v. ‘web, n. I.1.a.’) – judged at county assizes to be brought to Dublin ‘or other place appointed’ where the general commissioners could reward them (§§ numbered ‘25’, ‘26’ by Locke).

97 Ibid., fo. 19r: ‘And be it further enacted by the said Authority, that the said Corporation, Company, or Undertakers shall have power from time to time to make such By Laws as shall be found necessary and beneficial for the better mannaging and carrying on the said Manufactury’ (§ numbered ‘28’ by Locke).

98 ‘By ways and means’.

Figure 0

Figure 1. John Locke, Remarks on the bill for creating the Flax and Hemp Company of Ireland, late October 1697?, BL, Add. MS 27, 382, fo. 11r. Reproduced with permission of the British Library.