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Debts by Installment

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02/03/1897

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At the Peterborough County Court sitting of this day, a number of orders were made that give us a glimpse of the time. Charles Jenks, a labourer from Water Newton, had debts totalling £21 4s that had accrued due to his loss of work caused by illness. He offered to meet his debts to 8s 6d in the pound at the rate of 3s per month. An order was made allowing this situation. Daniel Monk, a labourer from Eye, was in deeper trouble with debts of £40 10s 4d. He was offering 9s in the pound on the debts - an offer accepted by the court and requiring him to pay at a rate of 6s per month. If my sums are right, that's five years of payments. Among the undefended cases we find that Charles Tebbs, butcher of Midgate, was seeking payment of £26 15s 6d from one W. Chapman of Robin Hood Chase in Nottingham. The claim was upheld and Chapman was required to pay the debt at 10s a month. Tebbs has to wait over four years for settlement of the debt - if he's lucky. (Peterborough Citizen)

Taken from The Peterborough Book of Days by Brian Jones, The History Press, 2014.

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Unfair Representation

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23/02/1892

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Twenty-four years after they were first set, Councillor Joseph Batten raised the matter of the inequality of electoral representation in the three wards of the Borough of Peterborough and proposed that the borough be redivided into four wards. It was pointed out that, currently, the east ward elected nine councillors, the north ward six and the south ward but three. No one disagreed that redistribution was necessary but politics and vested interests were involved. Nothing changed and five years later, in 1897, the 3,076 electors in the north ward still had 512 persons per councillor compared to the south ward's 217 voters and the east ward's 127. (Mellows, W.T., 'Peterborough Municipal Jubilee', Peterborough Standard, 1924)

Taken from The Peterborough Book of Days by Brian Jones, The History Press, 2014.

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