Adams Papers

To John Adams from Walter Mowbray, [20 April 1787]

From Walter Mowbray

[ca. 20 April 1787]1

Sir,

As the intelligence I am to communicate is in my opinion of the highest consequence to the mercantile interest of America I presume any apology for the freedom I take in writing to your Excellency is unnecessary.2

The discovery I am to make an intended forgery of the paper currency of America, so ingeniously executed as to elude discovery. One of the persons concerned in this nefarious business has applied to me to print off a considerable number of notes of different Provinces. I gave him such an answer as inclined him to believe I would comply with his request, that I might have it in my power to destroy in embryo a scheme artfully calculated to invade private property, and materially injure the credit of a commercial nation. He went away satisfied, and returned in a few hours with a wood cut of one of the notes an exact copy of the original, and metal borders precisely the same as those on the reverse side.3 He had sundry other notes, with metal ornaments which he also wanted impressions of. He is meanly dressed as a Sailor and apparently ignorant. But his habit and conversation have the appearance of disguise. There is no doubt but that he has accomplices in London; for on discovering a deficiency of two articles in the border of a note of which he wanted a thousand copies, he informed he would send to town for them. The wood cut and metal borders are so nicely imitated as to render a discovery of the forgery extremely difficult.

I am with the most profound / respect your Excellency’s / very humble Servant

Walter Mowbray

RC (Adams Papers).

1Thomas Wren enclosed Mowbray’s letter with his more comprehensive account of the counterfeiting scheme in his letter of 20 April, below. JA sent Mowbray’s letter, along with Wren’s of 22 April, to John Jay with his letter of 30 April, both below.

2Portsmouth, England, printer Walter Mowbray produced the Hampshire Chronicle until 1785, when a fire destroyed his shop. Mowbray filed for bankruptcy shortly thereafter but continued operations for another decade (F. A. Edwards, Early Hampshire Printers, Southampton, Eng., 1891, p. 116; London Chronicle, 24 Dec. 1785; London Star, 11 March 1795).

3North and South Carolina currency consisted of typeset notes with decorative borders, images, and text. The borders and images were first engraved on wooden blocks or copper plates and then assembled with the set type in a type-form, or box block, used in a printing press. Some counterfeiters imitated this process, while others made an engraving of the genuine note and used a small screw-press to transfer the image to paper (Philip L. Mossman, From Crime to Punishment: Counterfeit and Debased Currencies in Colonial and Pre-Federal North America, ed. Louis E. Jordan, N.Y., 2013, p. 201–204). Robert Muir tried to enlist an engraver and printer, providing the latter with box blocks. When arrested, Muir possessed genuine notes, woodcuts of the borders, cast metal flowers, types, and stamps (from Wren, 22 April 1787, below). See also Descriptive List of Illustrations, No. 1, above.

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