Difference between revisions of "Prices (Sea Dogs)"

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=Buying Power=
 
=Buying Power=
The following section is to give you an idea how much a
+
The following section is to give you an idea how much a sum of money can buy. These prices are right for both early and late campaigns (there being little inflation between the two).
sum of money can buy. These prices are right for both
 
early and late campaigns (there being little inflation
 
between the two).
 
 
<div style="column-count: 2;">
 
<div style="column-count: 2;">
 
:'''1/2d (half a penny):''' Half a loaf, during the gin craze earlier in the 1700s.
 
:'''1/2d (half a penny):''' Half a loaf, during the gin craze earlier in the 1700s.
Line 54: Line 51:
 
:'''18s 6d:''' A yard of rich brocaded satin.
 
:'''18s 6d:''' A yard of rich brocaded satin.
 
:'''£1 (one pound):''' A whole pig. A worsted wool skirt.
 
:'''£1 (one pound):''' A whole pig. A worsted wool skirt.
 +
:'''1s 4d:''' Rent for an inexpensive unfurnished room, per week
 +
:'''£1 12s. 10 ½d:''' A foundling child's uniform
 
:'''£1-36s (one pound to 36 shillings):''' Price of carpet per square yard.
 
:'''£1-36s (one pound to 36 shillings):''' Price of carpet per square yard.
 
:'''£1 1s (one guinea):''' A fine beaver hat, Twelve French lessons.
 
:'''£1 1s (one guinea):''' A fine beaver hat, Twelve French lessons.
Line 77: Line 76:
 
:'''£6-10:''' A silk overskirt.
 
:'''£6-10:''' A silk overskirt.
 
:'''£6-12:''' A silk bodice.
 
:'''£6-12:''' A silk bodice.
 +
:'''£8:''' A man's suit
 
:'''£8-30:''' A silk skirt.
 
:'''£8-30:''' A silk skirt.
 
:'''£8-15:''' A silk chemise.
 
:'''£8-15:''' A silk chemise.
 +
:'''£10:''' Rent for a house, per year
 +
:'''£10-12:''' Mules, per head, in Jamaica
 
:'''£12 4s:''' Indentured servant (adult European,) Virginia.
 
:'''£12 4s:''' Indentured servant (adult European,) Virginia.
 
:'''£20-100:''' A silk waistcoat
 
:'''£20-100:''' A silk waistcoat
 +
:'''£27-37 6s:''' A capital set of surgical instruments, sufficient for most procedures
 
:'''£30 5s:''' Sloop, 10-ton trader.
 
:'''£30 5s:''' Sloop, 10-ton trader.
 
:'''£32:''' Slave (adult African,) Americas.
 
:'''£32:''' Slave (adult African,) Americas.
Line 128: Line 131:
  
 
=Annual Wages=
 
=Annual Wages=
 +
<p>During the eighteenth century wages could be as low as two or three pounds per year for a domestic servant, plus food, lodging and clothing. A beggar would normally hope to be given between a farthing and two pence in alms, while a parish pauper could hope for a weekly pension of between a few pence and a few shillings. For a young boy chopping wood the going rate was 1 ½ pence per hour, while a porter could expect a penny for shifting a bushel of coal. A waterman would expect six pence to take you from Westminster to London Bridge, while a barber asked the same to dress your wig and give you a shave.</p>
 +
<p>Female domestic servants earned less than men. Wages for eighteenth-century women could range from the £2 or so mentioned above to between £6 and £8 for a housemaid, and up to £15 per annum for a skilled housekeeper. By contrast a footman could expect £8 per year, and a coachman anywhere between £12 and £26. Because they had to provide their own food, lodging and clothing, independent artisans needed to earn substantially more than this. £15 to £20 per year was a low wage, and a figure closer to £40 was needed to keep a family. The middling sort required much more still and could not expect to live comfortably for under £100 per year, while the boundary between the "middling sort" and the simply rich was in the region of £500. The First Lord of the Treasury enjoyed an annual salary of £4,000.</p>
 +
<div style="column-count: 2;">
 
:'''£5 5s:''' Housemaid, London
 
:'''£5 5s:''' Housemaid, London
 
:'''£12 16s:''' Sailor, Navy
 
:'''£12 16s:''' Sailor, Navy
 +
:'''£13:''' Police; Guard; Watchman
 
:'''£16 5s:''' Teacher, England
 
:'''£16 5s:''' Teacher, England
 
:'''£18:''' Farm Laborer, England
 
:'''£18:''' Farm Laborer, England
 +
:'''£19:''' General Labourer
 +
:'''£22:''' Government low-wage
 +
:'''£22:''' Miner
 +
:'''£31:''' Messenger; Porter (exc. govt.)
 
:'''£33 3s:''' Able Sailor, Merchant Marine
 
:'''£33 3s:''' Able Sailor, Merchant Marine
 +
:'''£44:''' Clerk (exc. govt.)
 
:'''£44 15s:''' Shopkeeper, England
 
:'''£44 15s:''' Shopkeeper, England
:'''£51 15s:''' Surgeon, England
+
:'''£52:''' Surgeon; Medical Officer
 +
:'''£63:''' Government high-wage
 
:'''£65 2s:''' Captain, Merchant Marine
 
:'''£65 2s:''' Captain, Merchant Marine
 +
:'''£100:''' Clergyman
 
:'''£112 15s:''' Attorney, England
 
:'''£112 15s:''' Attorney, England
 +
:'''£113:''' Solicitor; Barrister
 +
:'''£131:''' Engineer; Surveyor
 
:'''£300:''' Governor, North Carolina
 
:'''£300:''' Governor, North Carolina
 
:'''£300:''' Country Squire, England
 
:'''£300:''' Country Squire, England
Line 142: Line 158:
 
:'''£3000:''' Gentleman, England
 
:'''£3000:''' Gentleman, England
 
:'''£25000:''' Duke of Newcastle
 
:'''£25000:''' Duke of Newcastle
 +
</div>
  
 
=Other Earnings=
 
=Other Earnings=
Line 149: Line 166:
  
 
=Bounties=
 
=Bounties=
:'''£500 (or £1000?):''' Henry Avery
+
:'''£1000:''' Henry Avery
:Teach’s head carried a reward of £100, each commander on Teach’s outfit was worth £40, each quarter master or carpenter £20
+
:'''£500:''' Nicholas Browne/Christopher Winter
 +
:'''£200:''' Dick Turpin, Highwayman
 +
:'''£100:''' Teach’s head
 +
:'''£40:''' Any of Teach’s commanders
 +
:'''£20:''' Teach's quarter master or carpenter
  
 
[[Category: SeaDogs]][[Category:Campaign Information (Sea Dogs)]]
 
[[Category: SeaDogs]][[Category:Campaign Information (Sea Dogs)]]

Latest revision as of 14:42, 3 April 2023

Buying Power

The following section is to give you an idea how much a sum of money can buy. These prices are right for both early and late campaigns (there being little inflation between the two).

1/2d (half a penny): Half a loaf, during the gin craze earlier in the 1700s.
1d (one penny): Enough gin to get drunk on, A day's allowance of coal. Entry to a theatre. A loaf of bread. A pint of wine or ale.
1 1/2d: A pound of soap (by no means as gentle as today's soap, for it might contain traces of lye, a caustic substance), Hourly rate for a boy to chop firewood
2d (tuppence): Enough gin to get dead drunk on "Drunk for a penny, dead drunk for tuppence" A pound of meat. A whole chicken. A night in a dormitory with up to twenty others (dry, but watch your belongings).
3d (threepence): Supper of bread, cheese and beer, Cost of blood-letting for a poor person, Cost of postage of a one-page letter going 80 miles (paid for by recipient). Gallery seat at the theatre. 12-pound Whole Cod Fish, Boston.
4d (fourpence): A quart of beer, A boat across the river. A pound of butter or a dozen eggs.
4d–6d: A pound of cheese (domestic).
5d: A pound of hair powder.
6d (sixpence): A barber's fee for a shave and dressing of one's wig, Cost of sweeping one chimney.
6 1/4d (Sixpence farthing): Dinner for a government clerk (cold meat, bread and a pint of porter)
8d: Cost of an evening at a coffee house, Turnpike toll for a coach and four horses.
8d-10d: A pound of butter.
9d: Cost of an almanac.
10d–1s: 1lb of fat bacon (enough for two working men), 1lb fresh beef, A dozen Seville oranges (they would be used for making marmalade)
1s (one shilling): Dinner in a steakhouse - beef, bread and beer (plus tip), Sign-on bonus for army recruitment: The king's Shilling, Admission to Vauxhall pleasure gardens, Admission to Ranelagh Gardens (although it could be as much as two guineas on masquerade nights), A dish of beef at Vauxhall, 1lb of perfumed soap, Postage of a one page letter from London to New York, 1lb of Parmesan cheese. A box at the theatre. A bottle of rum. A dry place to sleep (per day). Coach ride, from edge to center of London.
1s 2d: Sailor's canvas trousers.
1s 6d: Rate of window tax per window of a house with 12+ windows (1762)
2s (2/-): Cost of 12 yards of gold braid, Weekly rent of a furnished room for a tradesman. A bottle of wine. Cotton or linen stockings. A sailors breeches.
2s 2d (2/2): Daily pay for journeyman tailors. A cotton or linen cravate.
2s 6d (2/6): A whole pig, A tooth extraction, Dinner sent in from a tavern, A chicken at Vauxhall gardens, A ticket to hear the rehearsal of the music for the royal fireworks at Vauxhall
2-5s: An hours or so's entertainment by a lady of the night.
2s 10d (2/10): 1lb of candles.
3s: A cotton or linen overskirt. A straw hat. A sailors cap. A sailors shirt. 1 barrel, cider. One pot, alleged cure for venereal disease, London.
3s 2d: A pair of men's yarn knitted stockings (knitting was fairly new)
3s 3d: A barrel of Colchester oysters.
4s: A gallon of rum. Book: General History of Pyrates.
4s 6d: A petticoat for a working woman. A belt.
5s (5/-): A pound of Fry's drinking chocolate, A bottle of claret at Vauxhall, A box at Drury Lane Theatre (1763), A workman's secondhand coat. A good meal (such as pork or fish, fresh bread, onions, yams and fresh fruit). Good lodgings (per day) with plenty of light in the day and sheltered from the elements. A linen or cotton shirt. Linen or cotton breeches.
4s 9d–6s: 1lb of coffee
5s 2d: A pint of lavender water.
5s 7d: A pair of women's worsted stockings.
6s: A pair of stays (a supportive undergarment) for a working woman. A cotton or linen skirt.
7s: A dozen rabbits in the market, A stout pair of shoes.
7s 6d–16s: 1lb of tea.
8s: A bottle of champagne at Vauxhall. Wool breeches.
8s 8d: A yard of flowered damask (you would need 15½ yards for one dress). A simple hat.
9s: Weekly wage of an unskilled labourer, A piece (14 1/2 yards) of Indian sprigged muslin. Sailor's waist coat.
10s: Cost of Dr Johnson's just-published Dictionary 1756. A corset or bodice. A wool overskirt. A linen or cotton chemise. A sailors jacket.
10s 6d: A bottle of Dr Prossilly's water for the pox (half a guinea was a common professional fee), A ticket to hear Handel's Messiah (Handel on the organ) at the Foundling Hospital, A ticket in pit or box at Theatre Royal, Covent Garden 1763.
12s: A gentleman's meal with four courses (such as suckling pig in a wine and honey sauce, fresh bread, game hen marinated in lemon juice, and pepper, green peppers stuffed with devilled crab, a delicate clam soup, muffins with butter and cheese, lemon sugar crumpets, all served with a sparkling white wine, and later a glass of good scotch to greet the evening). A woollen skirt. A cotton or linen waistcoat. A good pair of shoes.
10s 6d-1 15s: Cost of various wigs
13s 10d: A yard of Mechlin lace.
15s: A plumed hat.
16s: A pair of men's lace ruffles. A bottle of good wine.
17s 4d: A pair of men's silk stockings.
18s-22s: Weekly wage of a journeyman tradesman 1777.
18s: A wig for a clerk in a public office, A brass barometer.
18s 6d: A yard of rich brocaded satin.
£1 (one pound): A whole pig. A worsted wool skirt.
1s 4d: Rent for an inexpensive unfurnished room, per week
£1 12s. 10 ½d: A foundling child's uniform
£1-36s (one pound to 36 shillings): Price of carpet per square yard.
£1 1s (one guinea): A fine beaver hat, Twelve French lessons.
£1 6s: A pair of leather boots.
£1 9s: Season ticket to Vauxhall 1742.
£1 10s: A pair of velvet breeches.
£1 12s: A pair of stout silk-knit breeches.
£1 15s: Monthly pay of an East India Company seaman 1762.
£1-2: A silk cravate.
£1-4: A wool waistcoat.
£1-12: A quality wig.
£2 (two pounds): Annual shaving and wig-dressing contract. Silk stockings.
£2 2s (two guineas): A month's dancing lessons.
£2 10s: Annual pay of a ship's boy. A pound of tea.
£3-5: A wool coat.
£3-8: A silk shirt.
£4 10s (four and a half pounds): A suit of clothes for a clerk in public office.
£5: A fine silver hilted sword. A grooming kit (including razor, wash basin, linen, soap, cologne, comb, small shears and a small chamber pot).
£5 5s (five guineas): A silver watch. Doctor, annual retainer for a family, Boston.
£5-10: Silk breeches.
£5 16s 3d: Budget transportation, England to America.
£6: Cost of a night out, including supper, a bath and a fashionable courtesan
£6-10: A silk overskirt.
£6-12: A silk bodice.
£8: A man's suit
£8-30: A silk skirt.
£8-15: A silk chemise.
£10: Rent for a house, per year
£10-12: Mules, per head, in Jamaica
£12 4s: Indentured servant (adult European,) Virginia.
£20-100: A silk waistcoat
£27-37 6s: A capital set of surgical instruments, sufficient for most procedures
£30 5s: Sloop, 10-ton trader.
£32: Slave (adult African,) Americas.
£50-150: A silk coat.
£100-8000: Dowry for a women of the gentry or aristocracy.
£1000: Baronet title.
£5750: Total value, 100 acre sugar plantation, Jamaica
£8200: Frigate, 350 ton, 36 gun, fully-fitted.

Cargoes and Treasures

The following list is a by no means exclusive selection of cargoes and treasures:

9s: 1oz Spanish Silver.
£4 6s: 1oz Gold, London.
£10: Cask of Beer
£10: Cask of poor rum
£20: Cask of Vinegar or olive oil
£30: Cask of good rum
£30: Cask of local fruit wine
£50: A 5lb bar of silver
£50: Cask of (European) Wine
£100: Cask of fine wine
£100: Cask of Rosemary
£200: Cask of Pepper
£400: 200 Leather shoes (from Florence)
£400: Cask of Cloves
£600: 200 pieces of Pewterware (from London)
£800: 200 pieces of Glassware (from Amsterdam)
£800: A bolt of Silk
£800: Cask of Medicinal herbs
£1,000: 100lb of Sandalwood (from China)
£1,000: 50 Rugs (from Turkey)
£1,200: 200 Books (from Europe)
£1,500: A 5lb bar of Gold
£1,600: Cask of Ginseng
£1,800: 30 pieces of Furniture (from Paris)
£3,200: 800 Fans (from China)
£4,000: 100 pieces of Jewellery (from Spain)
£6,000: 50 pieces of Jewellery (from Venice)
£10,000: 200 pieces of silverware
£12,000: 300 Pearls
£40,000: 100lbs of assorted Semi-Precious gemstones (usually 300-500 in number)
£40,000: Ivory (10 tusks)
£200,000: 100lb of Precious gemstones (usually 500-1000 in number)

Annual Wages

During the eighteenth century wages could be as low as two or three pounds per year for a domestic servant, plus food, lodging and clothing. A beggar would normally hope to be given between a farthing and two pence in alms, while a parish pauper could hope for a weekly pension of between a few pence and a few shillings. For a young boy chopping wood the going rate was 1 ½ pence per hour, while a porter could expect a penny for shifting a bushel of coal. A waterman would expect six pence to take you from Westminster to London Bridge, while a barber asked the same to dress your wig and give you a shave.

Female domestic servants earned less than men. Wages for eighteenth-century women could range from the £2 or so mentioned above to between £6 and £8 for a housemaid, and up to £15 per annum for a skilled housekeeper. By contrast a footman could expect £8 per year, and a coachman anywhere between £12 and £26. Because they had to provide their own food, lodging and clothing, independent artisans needed to earn substantially more than this. £15 to £20 per year was a low wage, and a figure closer to £40 was needed to keep a family. The middling sort required much more still and could not expect to live comfortably for under £100 per year, while the boundary between the "middling sort" and the simply rich was in the region of £500. The First Lord of the Treasury enjoyed an annual salary of £4,000.

£5 5s: Housemaid, London
£12 16s: Sailor, Navy
£13: Police; Guard; Watchman
£16 5s: Teacher, England
£18: Farm Laborer, England
£19: General Labourer
£22: Government low-wage
£22: Miner
£31: Messenger; Porter (exc. govt.)
£33 3s: Able Sailor, Merchant Marine
£44: Clerk (exc. govt.)
£44 15s: Shopkeeper, England
£52: Surgeon; Medical Officer
£63: Government high-wage
£65 2s: Captain, Merchant Marine
£100: Clergyman
£112 15s: Attorney, England
£113: Solicitor; Barrister
£131: Engineer; Surveyor
£300: Governor, North Carolina
£300: Country Squire, England
£1200: Governor, New York
£3000: Gentleman, England
£25000: Duke of Newcastle

Other Earnings

£50: Daniel Defoe’s Book Advance for Robinson Crusoe
£540: Annual Profit, 100-acre Sugar Plantation, Jamaica
£7500: Annual Profit, 500-acre Sugar Plantation, Barbados

Bounties

£1000: Henry Avery
£500: Nicholas Browne/Christopher Winter
£200: Dick Turpin, Highwayman
£100: Teach’s head
£40: Any of Teach’s commanders
£20: Teach's quarter master or carpenter