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CHAPTER II

THE REWARD OF INVENTION

Forged Stamps -- Visit to Somerset House -- The Legion of Honour -- Letter to Lord Beaconsfield(1878) -- Letter to The Times The Reward of Invention -- A tardy recognition -- The Honour of Knighthood

While this die-making and stamping business was going on, I had discovered another and distinctly different mode of making, from an embossed paper stamp, dies which were capable of reproducing thousands of facsimile impressions. I at once saw to what a dangerous result this discovery might lead if made known to unscrupulous persons, and hence I carefully guarded the secret, which was, in fact quite useless to me, and might soon have been forgotten had not my attention been directed by some accidental circumstance to the fact that the forgery of stamps to an alarming extent was known by the Government to have been practised.

One of these sources of fraud was the removal from old and useless parchment deeds of stamps, which were again stuck on to new skins of parchment. Thinking over this subject, it struck me that a stamp might be made which it would be impossible to transfer from one deed to another, and at the same time would be much more difficult to produce by the stamping press; while it would be impracticable to obtain from it a die that would be capable of reproducing the stamp.

This appeared to me to be a most important invention, and one that I conceived it would be impolitic for the Government to reject; I supposed that I should be handsomely rewarded if I brought it under the notice of the authorities. I felt the more certain of success because I was able to show that their ordinary receipt and bill stamps, as well as the blue paper adhesive stamps on parchment deeds, could be forged by any office-boy, who could make a die from a paper stamp for a few pence, wholly without talent or technical knowledge.

Thus confident of success, I set to work to make a die for parchment deeds on my new plan, for the time putting aside and neglecting everything else, for this grand project was to make my fortune at once. After providing myself with a suitable press and experimenting with different forms of cutting punches, I decided on a plan. Having worked for some months, making long days which not unfrequently extended to the early hours of the morning, the task was finished, and I prepared some specimens to take with me to Somerset House.

With the idea of showing that there was no escape from the adoption of my new plan, I thought it advisable to make a die from a genuine Government stamp. For this purpose, I obtained a dozen ordinary embossed bill stamps, and from one of them made a die, and stamped about as many impressions with it as I had real stamps. In order that I might be able to prove that these were forged ones, I stamped the impressions on a large sheet of paper, and then cut out a slip from it with a slightly indented edge, but otherwise of the same form and size as those I had purchased. I may mention that the Stamp Office presses were so constructed that they could not put a stamp in the middle of a large sheet of paper, and hence I was enabled to prove that these particular stamps, with their slightly-indented edges, did not emanate from the Stamp Office. I made up a small parcel containing six genuine stamps and six of those I had myself made, and also the sheets of paper from the centre of which they had been cut. With these I also enclosed a few impressions of my new parchment stamp. The old form of Government stamps is illustrated in Fig. 4, Plate III.,

Government Deed Stamp

while Fig.5 illustrates my perforated stamp.

Bessemer Perforated Stamp

Below is shown a system introduced a few years ago for cancelling cheques and other documents.

Cancelled stamp

Full of hope and high expectation, I started off one morning to call on Sir Charles Presley, the then President of the Stamp Office. I had, up to this moment, kept all my plans and what I was doing a profound secret. The whole affair seemed to my overwrought imagination almost like a skilful plot, such as we see depicted on the stage or read of in a sensational novel; and I had, like the hero of the piece, only to walk into Somerset House and accept unconditional surrender.

On my way to the scene of my intended conquest I passed up Farringdon Street, and went into a fruiterer's shop at the corner of the New Market to buy an orange. How vividly I still remember this trifling incident in all its details. I ate my orange as I went jauntily up Fleet Street, thinking of nothing but how I should introduce the subject, what they would say, and how I should go through the ordeal I had to face, on the results of which depended all my dearest earthly hopes. Had I not in the silent hours of night, when I was pursuing my experiments, and wearily working at these new dies, told myself triumphantly: "A few more weeks will seal the fate of my whole life. If I succeed in saving the Government so much revenue, they must liberally reward me. I shall then establish myself in a new home, and marry the young lady to whom I have for two years been engaged." I had needed no stronger incentive to urge me onward as the lonely hours of night found me engaged in the laborious work of making these dies. I now felt that the task was over, and that I was well on the road to my reward; but suddenly my day-dream came to an end, for just as I approached Temple Bar I discovered that I was not in possession of my parcel of stamps. I was staggered for a moment, and a cold perspiration seemed to break out all over me. I felt faint and alarmed, for in a second I began to fully realise the fact that I had actually been possessed of forged stamps, and had left them on the counter of the shop where I had bought the orange. The little paper parcel was not sealed. What if curiosity had caused it to be looked into and handed over to the police? It was but a momentary hesitation, for I knew well that I was innocent of all intentional wrong, though perhaps not technically so, and I hastened back with all speed to the fruiterer's shop.

"Did you," I asked, "see a small parcel left here by me half an hour ago?"

"Oh, yes, sir," was the reply. "I put it on the shelf, thinking you would come back for it."

How gladly I once more grasped it, and felt that I was now safe, even from a momentary suspicion. I own that I was a little crestfallen and unnerved; but a sharp walk soon restored my confidence, and I entered Somerset House with a firm step and full faith that I should succeed in my mission. I was admitted into the private office of Sir Charles Presley, and said that I desired him to tell me if a dozen receipt stamps, which I handed him, were genuine. He looked at them attentively with a large magnifying glass, and laid two aside which he thought were not genuine. As far as I can remember exactly what passed, I said there were more forgeries among them, when he enquired, "How do you know that?"

I answered: "Simply because I forged them myself."

I could not quite suppress a smile as I said this somewhat triumphantly, and I distinctly remember his severe frown, as he said: "Young man, you treat this subject with a great deal of levity."

I at once apologised, and assured him that my object was solely to prevent all future forgery of stamps, and that I had ventured to test his experienced eye in order that he might himself appreciate the full danger to the State if my system were publicly known; unless, indeed, some remedy could be suggested for the prevention of further forgery.

As my scheme was unfolded he gradually relaxed that severe expression of countenance which plainly evinced that he felt annoyed at being tricked by a youth in so bold a manner, and the importance he evidently attached to my communication was manifested by his request that I would call again in a few days.

I may here briefly state that one of the plans I brought before the Stamp Office authorities was adopted by them, and has been to this day employed as a security against forgery on every stamp issued by the Stamp Office during the last half century; but I was nevertheless pushed from pillar to post, and denied all remuneration for the important services I had rendered. I was too busy making my way in life at this period to press any legal claims on the Government. I had no friend at Court, and had to bear this shameful treatment as best I could; and so, this matter of the stamps sunk gradually into oblivion until the year 1878, when my angry feelings against the Government were again excited by their refusal to allow me to accept the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour, which the French Government desired to present me with, provided that the British Government would permit me to wear it. The failure of all attempts to get this permission aroused my just indignation, and I, as so many aggrieved persons have done before me, and doubtless will do again, wrote a letter to The Times. As this letter has played a not-unimportant part in my life's history, I think it desirable to insert it in this place, although it is not in the chronological order of events.

I may, however, say that I no sooner saw this letter in print than it occurred to me that an ex parte statement of so grave a character against the Government in general, and some of its officials in particular, demanded at my hands some documentary or other proof of the truth of the statements thus publicly made, and that I ought to lay the whole matter before the Government of the day in justice to myself! With this object I determined to address myself to our then Prime Minister, Lord Beaconsfield, and also to furnish printed copies of this communication to each of the other Ministers of State. The following is a verbatim copy of a portion of these communications, as well as of my letter to The Times:--


TO THE RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF BEACONSFIELD.
Denmark Hill,
November 16th, 1878

MY LORD,

Under a feeling of some imitation, excited by recent events in connection with the Paris Exhibition, I felt impelled to relieve my mind of a long-suppressed grievance which my excessive dislike to controversy has hitherto prevented me from making public.

Under these circumstances I addressed a letter to The Times on the "Reward of Invention," which was published in that journal on the 1st November, 1878, a verbatim copy of which is embodied in this communication, and, as you will see, brings a very grave charge against some of the executive of a former Government; and, after perusing it in print, I saw at once that it was due to my own honour, and but fair to the Government, that I should bring forward some evidence in corroboration of the serious allegations therein contained, the more so as the public press have warmly espoused my cause, and commented in not very measured terms on the treatment I had received at the hands of the Government of that day.

No sooner, however, did the desirability of such corroborative evidence present itself to my mind than I took the necessary measures to acquire it; and notwithstanding the length of time that has elapsed since these events took place, I have succeeded in obtaining the most unimpeachable testimony in support of the charge brought by me against the British Stamp Office; but prior to bringing these proofs before the public, I have deemed it a duty which I owe, alike to myself and to the State, to bring the whole subject under the individual attention of each one of Her Majesty's present Cabinet Ministers; hence I have forwarded a copy of this letter separately addressed to each of them.

As far as my experience of the great commercial transactions of this country extends, I have found that in every instance where a firm takes in a new partner, and in every change of the directors of a railway, who have been elected to administer these great establishments have ever held inviolate the engagements of those whose position they have been called upon to occupy; nor can I for one moment doubt but that Her Majesty's Ministers will feel themselves equally bound in honour, if not to carry out the letter of the engagements entered into with me by their predecessors, at least to make such reparation and acknowledgment of my services to the State as will be both satisfactory to me and honourable to themselves, for I cannot believe it possible that my just claims will be repudiated by the British Government, and that its present Ministers will plead the Statute of Limitations as a sufficient bar to them; for this, after all, would be but to reduce it to a simple debt of honour, a form of obligation which it has ever been the pride of Englishmen to regard as their most sacred bond; and you will, I hope, pardon me when I confess that I cannot but coincide in the opinion so pithily expressed at the close of a leader in an influential journal,*[1] viz., that "The Rulers of the State at the present day must be held to have inherited the responsibility of rendering to Mr. Bessemer the reward of the services by which they and the country have so largely profited."

In order that you may fully understand and appreciate the value of the evidence which I have the honour to lay before you, I must beg the favour of your perusal of my letter on the "Reward of Invention," in which you will find a detailed account of my transactions with the Stamp Office, and on which my present claims are based. The following is a verbatim copy of that letter:--


THE REWARD OF INVENTION.
To the Editor of The Times.

SIR,

The letter which you favoured me by publishing last week in relation to the refusal of our Government to allow the Grand Cross to be accepted by our countrymen, has elicited many kindly and sympathising expressions from private correspondents; but to the mind of one gentleman I appear to have written "with some bitterness." Now, I may plead guilty to such feeling whenever my memory is driven back by force of circumstances to a period when the Government of this country inflicted on me a great and grievous injustice in exchange for a great and permanent benefit conferred by me on the State.

Perhaps nothing would tend so much to dispel this morbid feeling as a brief recital of the circumstances to which I refer.

The facts are briefly these:-- At the age of seventeen, I came to London from a small country village, knowing no one, and myself unknown, a mere cypher in this vast sea of human enterprise. My studious habits and love of invention soon gained for me a footing, and at twenty I found myself pursuing a mode I had invented of taking copies from antique and modem basso-relievos in a manner that enabled me to stamp them on cardboard, thus producing thousands of embossed copies of the highest works of art at a small cost. The facility with which I could make a permanent die, even from a thin paper original, capable of producing a thousand copies, would have opened a wide door to successful fraud if my process had been known to unscrupulous persons; for there is not a Government stamp or the paper seal of any corporate body that every common office-clerk could not forge in a few minutes at the office of his employer or at his own home. The production of a die from a common paper stamp is the work of only ten minutes; the materials cost less than a penny. No sort of technical skill is necessary, and a common copying-press or letter-stamp yields most successful copies. There is no need for the would-be forger to associate himself with a skilful die-sinker capable of making a good imitation in steel of the original, for the merest tyro could make an absolute copy on the first attempt. The public knowledge of such a means of forging would, at that time, have shattered the whole system of the British Stamp Office, had I been so incautious as to allow a knowledge of my method to escape. The secret has, however, been carefully guarded to this day.

No sooner, however, had this fact dawned on me than I began to consider if some new sort of stamp could be devised to prevent so serious a mischief. During the time I was engaged in studying this question, I was informed that the Government were themselves cognisant of the fact that they were losers to a great amount annually by the transfer of stamps from old and useless deeds to new skins of parchment, thus making the stamps do duty a second or third time, to the serious loss of the Revenue. At a later date, this fact was confirmed by Sir Charles Presley, of the Stamp Office, who told me that he believed they were defrauded in this way to the extent of probably £100,000 per annum. To fully appreciate the importance of this fact, and realise the facility afforded for this species of fraud by the system then in use, it must be understood that the ordinary impressed or embossed stamp, such as is employed on all bills of exchange, if impressed directly on a skin of parchment, would be entirely obliterated if the deed be exposed for a few months to a damp atmosphere. The deed would thus appear as if unstamped, and therefore invalid. To prevent this, it has been the practice as far back as the reign of Queen Anne, to gum a small piece of blue paper on to the parchment; and to render it still more secure a strip of metal foil is passed through it, and another piece of paper with the printed initials of the Sovereign is gummed over the loose ends of the foil at the back. The stamp is then impressed on the blue paper, which, unlike parchment, is incapable of losing the impression by exposure to a damp atmosphere. But, practically, it has been found that a little piece of moistened blotting-paper applied for a whole night so softens the gum that the two pieces of paper and the slip of foil can be removed from the old deed most easily and applied to a new skin of parchment, and thus be made to do duty a second or third time. Thus the expensive stamps on thousands of old deeds of partnership, leases and other documents, when no longer of value, offered a rich harvest to those who were dishonest enough to use them.

With a knowledge of these facts I was enabled to fully appreciate the importance of any system of stamps that would effectually prevent so great a loss to the Government; nor did I for one moment doubt but that Government would amply reward me if I were successful in so doing. After some months of study and experiment -- which I cheerfully undertook, although it interfered considerably with the pursuit of my regular business, inasmuch as it was necessary to carry on the experiments with the strictest secrecy, and to do all the work myself during the night after my people had left work -- at last I succeeded in making a stamp that satisfied all the necessary conditions. It was impossible to remove it from one deed and transfer it to another. No amount of damp, or even saturation with water, could obliterate it, and it was impossible to take any impression from it capable of producing a duplicate.

I knew nothing of patents or patent law in those days, and if I had for a moment thought it necessary to make any preliminary conditions with Government, I should have at once scouted the idea as one utterly unworthy. Dealing direct with Government, I argued, must render my interest absolutely secure; and in this full confidence, I wended my way one fine morning to Somerset House, and was ushered into the presence of the chief, Sir Charles Presley. I explained the object of my call, and showed him numerous proofs in my possession: how easily all his stamps could be forged, and also my mode of prevention. He was greatly astonished at what I had communicated and shown to him, and asked me to call again in a few days, which I did, and after further conversation on the subject he suggested that I should work out the principle of my invention more fully. This I was only too anxious to do; and some five or six weeks later, I called on him again with a newly-designed stamp, which greatly pleased him. The design was circular, about 2 1/2 inches in diameter, and consisted of the garter, with the motto in capital letters surrounded by a crown. Within the Garter was a shield, with the words "Five Pounds." The space between the shield and the Garter was filled with network in imitation of lace.*[2] The die had been executed in steel, which had pierced the parchment with more than four hundred holes, each one of the necessary form to produce its special portion of the design. Since that period, perforated paper has been largely employed for valentines and other ornamental purposes, but was previously unknown. It was at once obvious that the transfer of such a stamp was impossible. It was equally clear that mere dampness could not obliterate it; nor was it possible to take any impression from it capable of perforating another skin of parchment.

The design gave great satisfaction, and everything went on smoothly; Sir Charles again consulted Lord Althorp, and the Stamp Office authorities determined to adopt it. I was then asked if, instead of receiving a sum of money from the Treasury, I should be satisfied with the position of Superintendent of Stamps, at some £600 or £800 per annum. This was all I could desire, and great was my rejoicing at the prospect before me, for I was at that time engaged to be married, and my future position in life seemed now assured. A few days after affairs had assumed this satisfactory position, I called on the young lady to whom I was engaged (now Mrs. Bessemer), and showed her the pretty piece of network which constituted my new parchment stamp. I explained to her how it could never be removed from the parchment and used again, mentioning the fact that old deeds with stamps on them dated as far back as the reign of Queen Anne could be fraudulently used, when she at once said, "Yes, I understand this; but surely, if all the stamps had a date put on them they could not at a future time be used again without detection?" This was, indeed, a new light, and I confess greatly startled me, but I at once said the steel dies used for this purpose can have but one date engraved upon them. But after a little consideration I saw that moveable dates were by no means impossible; and shortly afterwards it came into my mind that this could easily be effected by drilling three holes of about a quarter of an inch in diameter in the steel die, and fitting into each of these openings a steel plug or type with sunk figures engraved on their ends, giving on one the day of the month, on the next the month of the year, and on the third circular steel type the last two figures of the year. I saw clearly that this plan would be most simple and efficient, would take less time and money to inaugurate than the elaborate plan I had devised; but I must confess that while I felt pleased and proud at the clever and simple suggestion of the young lady, I saw also that all my more elaborate system of piercing dies, the result of months of study, and the toil of many a weary and lonely night, was shattered to pieces by it, and I more than half feared to disturb the decision that Sir Charles Presley had come to as to the adoption of my perforated stamp; but with my strong conviction of the advantages of my new plan I felt in honour bound not to suppress it, whatever might be the result. Thus it was that I soon found myself again closeted with Sir Charles at Somerset House, discussing the new scheme, which he much preferred, because he said all the old dies, old presses, and old workmen could be employed, and there would be but little change in the Office; so little, in fact, that no new Superintendent of Stamps was required, which the then unknown art of making and using piercing dies would have rendered absolutely necessary. After due consideration my first plan was definitely abandoned by the Office in favour of the dated stamps, with which everyone is now familiar. In six or eight weeks from this time, an Act of Parliament was passed calling in the private stock of stamps dispersed throughout the country, and authorising the issue of the new dated ones.

Thus was inaugurated a system that has been in operation some forty-five years,*[3] successfully preventing that source of fraud from which the Revenue had so severely suffered. If anything like Sir Charles Presley's estimate of £100,000 per annum was correct, this saving must now amount to some millions sterling; but whatever the varying amount might have been, it is certain that so important and long-established a system as that in use at the Stamp Office would never have been voluntarily broken up by its own officials except under the strongest conviction that their losses were very great, and that the new order of things would prove an effectual barrier to future fraud.

During all the bustle of this great change, no steps had been taken to instal me in the office. Lord Althorp had resigned., and no one seemed to have any authority to do anything for me; all sorts of half promises and excuses followed each other with long delays between, and I gradually saw the whole thing sliding out of my grasp. Instead of holding fast to my first plan, which they could not have executed without my aid and the special knowledge I had acquired, I had in all the trustfulness of youthful inexperience shown them another so simple that they could put it in operation without any assistance from me. I had no patent to fall back upon. I could not go to law, even if I wished to do so, for I was reminded when pressing for mere money out of pocket, that I had done all the work voluntarily and of my own accord. Wearied and disgusted, I at last ceased to waste time in calling at the Stamp Office, for time was precious to me in those days, and I felt that nothing but increased exertions could make up for the loss of some nine months of toil and expenditure. Thus, sad and dispirited, and with a burning sense of injustice overpowering all other feelings, I went my way from the Stamp Office, too proud to ask as a favour that which was indubitably my just right; and up to this hour I have never received one shilling or any kind of acknowledgement from the British Government. Such has been my reward.

I am, Sir, Your obedient Servant, (Signed) HENRY BESSEMER.

Denmark Hill, 29th October, 1878.

In all the early stages of the development of my invention for piercing designs on parchment, I had depended entirely on my own hands; but when I was desired by the Stamp Office authorities to show how I proposed practically to carry out the invention, I designed the form of stamp described in my letter to The Times, and which is faithfully represented by an impression on the fly-leaf at the commencement of this letter; the execution of the somewhat elaborate design in steel, represented by this impression, was entrusted by me to Messrs. Porter and Son, die-sinkers of some eminence, at that time carrying on business in Percival Street, Clerkenwell, and whom I had frequently before employed to re-touch the cast-metal dies used by me for stamping works of art in relief on cardboard.

Now, in order to obtain positive evidence in corroboration of my letter to The Times of November 1st, it was of paramount importance that I should find Mr. Porter, if still alive; I had strong hopes of doing so, as I had both seen and conversed with him twice within the last eight or ten years, but had no knowledge of his present residence; failing to obtain this information, I resorted to an advertisement in the second column of The Times, on November 6th and six following days, which happily resulted in Mr. Porter communicating with me. He knew me well as an old customer of his firm, and reminded me of some of the more important dies re-touched by him; in consequence of the extremely novel character of the piercing die referred to, and the unusually difficult and laborious nature of the work, consequent on the extreme depth of the engraving, it had been fully impressed on his memory, and he was enabled at once to recognise the impression given on the fly-leaf of this letter as a faithful (though somewhat less artistically finished) copy of the piercing die executed by his firm for me in 1833.*[4]

In order to secure permanently this important evidence, Mr. Porter made, at my request, a statutory declaration to that effect, his identity being witnessed by a gentleman of position who had known him intimately for the last thirty-five years. A verbatim copy of this declaration is appended hereto.

The advertisement referred to induced many persons to whom I was known to tender such information as they might happen to possess in reference to Mr. Porter; one of these letters was from a Mr. Richard Cull, a gentleman with whom I became personally and intimately acquainted soon after my first arrival in London, about the year 1831. Being a man of taste and superior education, he took great interest in my invention for cheaply reproducing works of art in bas-relief, and during our intimacy of that period he proposed to join me as partner in the commercial carrying-out of my invention, but this proposition was never carried into effect.

Many years had elapsed since I had seen Mr. Cull, during which time he had risen to the highest eminence as a philologist and a prominent member of the Society of Antiquarians. Most fortunately, he had happened to see my advertisement for Mr. Porter in The Times, and having been acquainted in early life with Mr. Porter and his family, he at once wrote to me on the subject; he had also seen my letter in The Times on the "Reward of Invention," and it is to that circumstance, no doubt, that I owe the closing remarks of his letter, of which the following is a verbatim copy, omitting only some irrelevant family matters relative to Mr. Porter:--

12, Tavistock Street, Bedford Square, November 9th, 1878.

DEAR MR. BESSEMER,

It is some time since we met, but seeing your advertisement for Mr. Porter, the die-sinker, I determined to write to inform you what I can on the subject. He was a very good artist, but he failed in business and took a situation in the City; I knew him very well, and his family, including his father, mother, and sister. . . . . I think he must now be dead, as I have not met him for fourteen or fifteen years, and he never said where he lived after leaving Percival Street.

I remember SEVERAL CONVERSATIONS with you concerning Sir C. Presley and your invention, AT THE TIME OF YOUR INTERVIEWS WITH HIM. I Well remember the unfavourable opinions I formed of that official.

I am, Yours very truly, (Signed) R. CULL.

This letter from a gentleman I had for so many years lost sight of was a most unexpected and spontaneous confirmation of the fact that I was at the time mentioned in constant communication with Sir Charles Presley on the subject of my newly-invented stamps, and also that our conversations at the time had impressed Mr. Cull with "an unfavourable opinion of that official." I have no doubt but that in our frequent and friendly intercourse I had complained loudly of the constant evasions with which my claims were met at the Stamp Office, which must have given rise to this unfavourable impression in the mind of my friend, and which, it appears, was strongly enough imprinted to survive for so many years, although the precise reasons for it are no longer distinctly remembered. At my suggestion, Mr. Cull unhesitatingly made a statutory declaration on the 15th of November embodying these facts, a verbatim copy of which is appended.

In my letter on the "Reward of Invention," I stated that I was twenty years of age when my experiments for the prevention of forgery were commenced. Now, I was born on the 19th, January, 1813, hence I had arrived at twenty years of age in January, 1833. I have also stated that after some months of study and experiment, I succeeded in producing a stamp which satisfied all the necessary conditions; then follow the intervals between my several interviews with Sir Charles Presley, and also the five or six weeks occupied by Mr. Porter in engraving the die, which was accepted by the Stamp Office authorities; and then came the application to Parliament for an Act to empower the Commissioners of Stamps to call in all the old stamps and issue new ones in lieu of them. This Act of Parliament, if I correctly understood Sir Charles Presley, was hurried through the House in six or eight weeks; it was, in fact, as I now find, passed on August 29th, 1833, or just seven months and ten days after I was twenty years of age; thus, proving how accurate I was in my statement of the period when these transactions took place, and which family matters had impressed indelibly on the memory.

I mentioned also in my letter to The Times that an Act of Parliament was passed calling in all stocks of stamps dispersed throughout the country, and authorising the issue of the new dated ones. I did not know of my own knowledge that such an Act had been passed, but I perfectly well remember being told so by Sir Charles Presley, because it was an absolute assurance to me that my plans would be adopted; but I relied solely on Sir Charles Presley's statement to that effect. Hence, when it occurred to me that this Act of Parliament would form a most important link in the chain of evidence I desired to establish, I must confess to some trepidation lest Sir Charles had misinformed me, or had spoken only of an Act in the course of passing through Parliament, but which might have been thrown out and never passed at all; thus, when I applied to my solicitor to obtain, if possible, a copy of the Act in question, I was greatly pleased to find that not only was the statement of Sir Charles Presley (repeated by me in The Times) confirmed, but I found that this Act of Parliament*[5] in its preamble admitted the fact that "the laws heretofore enacted, and now in force in Great Britain, have been FOUND INSUFFICIENT TO PREVENT THE SELLING AND UTTERING OF FORGED STAMPS ON VELLUM, PARCHMENT, AND PAPER.

Powers are given under the different sections of this Act to BUY UP AND DESTROY ALL STAMPS AND STAMPED PARCHMENTS then in possession of all vendors of stamps throughout the country. Full powers are also given to the Commissioners to DISCONTINUE the use of ALL DIES HERETOFORE USED in the Stamp Office, and authorising the employment of ANY NEW DIE OR DIES, With such DEVICE OR DEVICES as the Commissioners MAY THINK FIT.

The Act also declares that after three months from that date all stamps previously issued, or any deeds stamped therewith, shall be deemed to be illegal.

Then follows a most stringent clause (Section 12), making it felony punishable by TRANSPORTATION FOR LIFE BEYOND SEAS, for any person to JOIN, FIX, OR PLACE UPON any vellum parchment or paper, any stamp, mark or impression, which shall have been CUT, TORN, OR GOTTEN OFF, OR REMOVED from any Vellum, parchment or paper, etc.

The object of this last clause is clearly to add, by the terrors of a most sweeping and stringent penal law, to the security which the new stamp was calculated to afford against the heavy losses which the Government had for so many years sustained by the transfer of stamps from one deed to another; and bears evidence, as indeed does the whole document, of the perfect state of panic into which the Stamp Office was thrown when they fully realised the extreme facility which my method of making composition dies from any paper impressions afforded for successfully forging every description of embossed stamp.

It is almost impossible to realise the spectacle afforded by one of the most conservative of all the institutions of the State -- one which has stood its ground for generations -- suddenly and without the smallest reserve flinging over every tradition of the past, repudiating all its former issues, and buying back again from the public all the stamps it could lay hands upon, for no better purpose than their destruction, and proclaiming by advertisement that their use, if not brought back, would be illegal; thus suddenly waking up, as it were, from a long period of fancied security, and seeking in hot haste powers from the legislature to protect them by the most severe of all penal laws next to that of death, and asking at the same time full powers to search all domiciles, shops, warehouses or places, under the mere suspicion that forged stamps may be concealed there, and to seize all stamps suspected of being forged; thus showing a not unnatural dread lest the secret of my method of reproducing embossed impressions might become known, and result in flooding the country with spurious stamps.

Thus does it sometimes happen that the stern realities of life overstep the boldest flights of imagination. Who in his wildest dreams could have supposed that one of the oldest departments of the State would be thrown into utter confusion, requiring immediate legislative action for its security; that the loss of vast sums annually to the Revenue would be prevented, and that a great temptation and incentive to crime would find a perfect remedy at the hands of a mere boy and girl? Such things are of themselves strange enough, but it is still more extraordinary that the Government of a country which prides itself more than any other in the civilised world on its simple justice and inviolable honour should have received so great a boon at the hands of a youth who was struggling hard to create for himself a position in the world, and who, in the fulness of his unbounded faith in their honour and integrity, placed unreservedly in their hands the power of doing all this, without retaining the smallest check on them for his own protection; and who up to this hour has never received one iota of the remuneration held out to him as an inducement to persevere with his invention, or even one word of thanks acknowledgment of the great and lasting benefits he has conferred upon the State.

Such, then, are the circumstances under which I now come forward to vindicate my honour, by proving the truth of the statements publicly made through The Times; and to claim, at the hands of Her Majesty's present Ministers, such payment or acknowledgment of my past services as may be consistent with the honour and dignity of the State, and at the same time acceptable to myself.

I scarcely need say that I shall at any time be happy to give personally any further facts or explanations that may be desired in relation to this matter; and I may further add that Mrs. Bessemer as well as myself, has a perfect remembrance of the circumstances connected with her suggestions of the dating on stamps, and which has for more than half a generation been a sort of tradition in the family, perfectly well known and fully understood by more than a dozen of its members.

I have mentioned all these facts most unreservedly, that you might be in a position to judge if I have not had substantial grounds for dissatisfaction with the administrators of former Governments.

But the one and only claim I now make has reference to the engagements entered into with me by the Stamp Office, and in this case I merely ask that a simple act of common justice may be done, such as in private life the law would compel, and individual character would render imperative; nor do I doubt for one moment that Her Majesty's present Ministers, who have so nobly maintained untarnished the honour of the British nation in every part of the world, will (now they are aware of the fact) most gladly blot out from the page of history the deep stain on the nation's honour which has been so long recorded in the annals of the British Stamp Office.

In conclusion, allow me to apologise for the length to which I have extended this letter, and to offer you my most grateful thanks for your kind perusal of it; and further allow me the honour to subscribe myself

Your most obedient, humble Servant, (Signed) HENRY BESSEMER.

I need not say how anxious I was to receive a reply from Lord Beaconsfield to this rather bold assertion of my claims on the Government, but I felt well assured that every enquiry among the still existing officials at Somerset House could not fail in establishing the justice of my demands. These printed letters to Her Majesty's Cabinet, Ministers were posted on May 5th, 1879, and were most courteously acknowledged, and resulted in an investigation being instituted. On May 29th, I was honoured by an autograph reply from Lord Beaconsfield, of which a photographic copy is here given (Fig. 6, Plate IV.);

Facsimile of Lord Beaconsfields Letter

and which clearly shows that both he and his colleagues were not only satisfied of the truth of the charges I had made, but were honourable enough to offer such compensation as they had in their power to bestow, and which I cordially accepted as a full acknowledgment of the services rendered. The form taken was the more satisfactory to me, inasmuch as it was a reward in which Mrs. Bessemer would take an equal share with myself, as she had already done in the invention which had been of such signal service to the State.

On the 21st June I received an intimation from the Right Honourable R.A. Cross that Her Most Gracious Majesty had been pleased to signify her intention of conferring on me the honour of Knighthood, after the Council which would be held at Windsor Castle, on Thursday, the 26th instant ensuing. I accordingly repaired to Windsor on that day. One of the royal carriages awaited my arrival at the station, and conveyed me to the Castle, where I had the honour of passing through the quaint and interesting ceremony of kneeling on one knee before Her Majesty, and receiving a gentle blow across the shoulder from a light and beautifully jewelled sword, and was commanded to express my gratitude by kissing the hand of Her Most Gracious Majesty. I afterwards took lunch at the Castle, and then returned to London.


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Footnotes
[1] The Times

[2] See engraving of this stamp, Fig. 5, Plate III

[3] Now over seventy years ago

[4] See Fig.5, Plate III

[5] This Act is the 3rd and 4th of William IV., Chapter 97, dated August 29th, 1833