A smuggler ... honest thief or wretch? Opinion was divided some 200 years ago when smuggling was in its heyday and known as that infamous traffick. Charles Lamb, the essayist, was in favour when he wrote in the early 1800s, I like a smuggler; he is the only honest thief. The great lexicographer Dr Johnson begged to differ when he wrote this definition in his dictionary: A smuggler is a wretch who, in defiance of the laws, imports or exports without payment of the customs. Most people would rather agree with Lamb, but Johnsons definition is nearer the truth. The heyday of the contraband trade came in the eighteenth century when heavy taxes on luxury items made their illegal importation highly profitable. The British love for these supposed luxuries of tea, tobacco and spirits is explained in fascinating detail. The violence of the trade is explored through the notorious Hawkhurst gang, who resorted to wholesale corruption, terrorism and murder to protect their infamous trafficking. Their enormous crimes are described in detail, as are the trials which finally broke up the gang in 1749. Chris McCooey has traced the history of an era which was brought to a violent and bloody conclusion in the 1830s. It dispels many misconceptions that the reader may have about the subject and provides a new insight into an intriguing period of our history.
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€17.50
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Product Details
Weight: 231g
Dimensions: 124 x 198mm
Publication Date: 15 Nov 2014
Publisher: Amberley Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781445643656
About Chris McCooey
Chris McCooey was born in Tunbridge Wells in 1949 and was educated at The Skinners School. He spent three years at University College Oxford his thesis was titled 'Socio-Geographical Aspects of Illicit Trading in Kent in the 18th Century' in other words smuggling. He then spent ten years teaching in Japan. He studied at the Graduate School of Journalism University of California and Berkeley before returning to the UK with his Japanese wife Kumiko and their two children Matthew and Emi one of whom is now an actor and film director the other a solicitor. Home is just outside Tunbridge Wells overlooking a lake and a wood. Chris contributes regularly to the weekend sections of the national papers like The Times FT Mail and Express on food travel and country matters as well as other papers and magazines. He also writes and publishes local books on Kent and Sussex.
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