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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: PAS-PER |
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PATERSON, WILLIAM (1658-1719) , British writer on finance, founder of the Bank of England and projector of the Darien scheme , was born in April 1658 at the farmhouse of Skipmyre, parish of Tinwald, Dumfriesshire. His parents occupied the farm there, and with them he resided till he was about seventeen. A desire to escape the religious persecution then raging in Scot-land, and the immemorial ambition of his race, led him south-ward. He went through England with a pedlar's pack
scheme . On his return to England he was unable to induce the government of James II. to engage in his plan. He went to the continent and pressed it to no purpose in Hamburg, Amsterdam and Berlin, and on his return to London he engaged in trade and rapidly amassed a considerable fortune. About 16go he was occupied in the formation in the Hampstead
original
corporation of London was to form the stock). They feared a dangerous rival to their own undertaking, and they felt some distrust for this eager Scotsman whose brain teemed with new plans in endless succession.At that time the people of the northern kingdom were considering how best to share in that trade which was so rapidly enriching their southern neighbours. Paterson saw his opportunity. He removed to Edinburgh, unfolded his Darien (q.v.) scheme, and soon had the whole nation with him. He is the supposed author of the act of 1695 which formed the " Company of Scotland trading to Africa and the Indies." This company, he arranged, should establish a settlement on the Isthmus of Darien, and " thus hold the key of the commerce of the world." There was to be free trade, the ships of all nations were to find shelter in this harbour not yet erected, differences of race or religion were neglected; but a small tribute was to be paid to the company, and this and other advantages would so act that, at one supreme stroke, Scotland was to be changed from the poorest to the richest of nations. On the 26th of July 1698 the first ships of the expedition set sail " amidst the tears and prayers and praises of relatives and friends and countrymen." Some financial transactions in which Paterson was concerned, and in which, though he had acted with perfect honesty, the company had lost, prevented his nomination to a post of importance. He accompanied the expedition as a private individual, and was obliged to look idly on whilst what his enemies called his " golden dream " faded away indeed like the " baseless fabric of a vision " before his eyes. His wife and child died, and he was seized with a dangerous illness, " of which, as I afterwards found," he says, " trouble of mind was not the least cause." It was noted that " he hath been so mightily concerned in this sad disaster, so that he looks now more 912 like a skeleton than a man." Still weak and helpless, and yet protesting to the last against the abandonment of Darien, he was carried on board ship, and, after a stormy and terrible voyage, he and the remnant of the ill-fated band reached home in December 1699. In his native air Paterson soon recovered his strength, and immediately his fertile and eager mind was at work on new schemes. He prepared an elaborate plan for developing Scottish resources by means of a council of trade, and then tried to induce King William, with whom he had frequent interviews, to enter on a new Darien expedition. In 1701 he removed to London, and here by conferences with statesmen, by writing, and by personal persuasion helped on the union. He was much employed in settling the financial relations of the two countries. One of the last acts of the Scots parliament was to recommend him to the consideration of Queen Anne for all he had done and suffered. The United Parliament, to which he was returned as a member for the Dumfries burghs, though he never took his seat, decided that his claim should be settled, but it was not till 1715 that an indemnity of b8,241 was ordered to be paid him. Even then he found considerable difficulty in obtaining his due. His last years were spent in Queen Square, Westminster, but he removed from there shortly before his death on the 22nd of January 1719. As many as twenty-two works, all of them anonymous, are attributed to Paterson. These are classified by Bannister under six heads, as dealing with (I) finance, (2) legislative union, (3) colonial enterprise, (4) trade, (5) administration, (6) various social and political questions: Of these the following deserve special notice: (I) Proposals and Reasons for constituting a Council of Trade (Edinburgh, 1701).1 This was a plan to develop the resources of his country. A council, consisting of a president and twelve members, was to be appointed. It was to have a revenue collected from a duty on sales, lawsuits, successions, &c. With these funds the council was to revive the Darien scheme, to build workhouses, to employ, relieve and maintain the poor, and to encourage manufactures and fisheries. It was to give loans without interest
Paterson's plans were vast and magnificent, but he was no 1 This work was attributed to John Law, who borrowed some of his ideas from it. To Law's, " system " Paterson was strongly opposed, and it was chiefly due to his influence that it made no way in Scotland.mere dreamer. Each design was worked out in minute detail,' each was possible and practical. The Bank of England was a stupendous success. The Darien expedition failed from hostile attacks and bad arrangements. But the original
See Life of W. Paterson, by S. Bannister (Edinburgh, 1858) ; Paterson's Works, by S. Bannister (3 vols., London, 1859) ; The Birthplace and Parentage of W. Paterson, by W. Pagan
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