- William Dockwra
William Dockwra was an English entrepreneur who created the first
penny post . He was born in theCity of London , the son of an armourer, and was baptised on26 April 1635 . He was the uncle ofMary Davies , whose dowry ofMayfair and other lands near London would make theGrosvenor family the richest family in England by the 19th century, and this connection was to prove beneficial to Dockwra's own fortunes.Dockwra was apprenticed to one of his father's fellows in the
Armourers' Company , but his career subsequently took a variety of turns. In the 1660s he obtained a position at the Custom House. By the 1670s he was a merchant in the Africanslave trade , but he suffered major losses when a ship in which he had a large share was seized for breaching theRoyal African Company 's licencedmonopoly .In the 1680s Dockwra established the first
penny post , which served London and the surrounding area to a distance of ten miles. The service, launched27 March ,1680 [ [http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~awoodley/Letter2.html Eunice and Ron Shanahan, "Before the Penny Black", articles which originally appeared in "Stamp News"] ] , worked on the basis that "the one penny postage was paid when the letter was accepted" (a key element of Rowland Hill's 1839 reforms of the British postal system). Dockwra obtained apatent for his service, but unfortunately for him the profits from the government operated General Post Office had been granted to the King's brother the Duke of York. Dockwra was required to surrender his patent and pay £2,000 in compensation. His fortunes improved after the Duke, by then King James II, was expelled from the country in 1688. In 1690 Dockwra was granted a pension of £500 a year; then in 1697 he was appointed as comptroller of the penny post. However in 1700 he was dismissed after an investigation into his conduct of the business, including complaints that he had moved the central office from Cornhill to a less convenient location and had opened and detained correspondence.Meanwhile Dockwra had been appointed as the London agent for the sale of
lead from the Grosvenor family's lead mines inWales , and had become the senior partner in abrass smelting business based inEsher . This project introduced some technical innovations and helped to reduce England's dependence on imports, but it was not a financial success for Dockwra, who lost control of the business. He is believed to have been poor at his death in 1716.References
* cite book |last= Staff |first=Frank |authorlink= |coauthors= |editor= |title=The Penny Post 1680-1918|year=1993
publisher= [http://www.lutterworth.com/lp/titles/penny.htm The Lutterworth Press] |location= |isbn= 071882878X
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