Collis, Isaac Mossop, 1852 or 1853-, Isaac Collis album of pawnbroker's tickets, 1879-1881
- Title(s):
- Isaac Collis album of pawnbroker's tickets.
- Additional Title(s):
- Isaac Collis pledge book
- Published/Created:
- Whitehaven, England, 1879-1881.
- Physical Description:
- 1 volume (approximately 250 tickets) ; 14 x 12 cm
- Holdings:
- Rare Books and ManuscriptsHG2016.G6 C6 1879Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Fund[Request]
- Copyright Status:
- Copyright Undetermined
- Full Orbis Record:
- http://hdl.handle.net/10079/bibid/13907913
- Classification:
- Archives & Manuscripts
- Notes:
- The 1901 census records Isaac Mossop Collis, pawnbroker and jeweler at Whitehaven, Cumberland, aged 48, head of a household which (with his wife Mary Ellen) included four sons and three daughters.
Bound in contemporary quarter calf and purple cloth. The front cover includes the remnant of a manuscript label; the verso, the remnant of a printed stationer's label. Front and rear covers were cut in half (presumably when the last ticket was completed) to match the width of the tickets after the halves bearing the customer's receipts were all torn away.
Album of 250 printed pawnbroker's tickets, completed in manuscript, for pledges (pawns) transacted with Isaac Collis, of 5 Church Street, Whitehaven. The volume would have originally been about 24 cm in width (i.e., oblong); the fore-edges of tickets in the album bear the perforations from which receipts for the pledged item(s) were torn off, given to the customer by Collis. All of the tickets are completed in black ink with the pawner's name, address, details of the item(s) pledged, their value, the pawnbroker's charges (from 2d to 6d), and the signature of the pledged. Tickets are in chronological order, from February 19, 1879, to March 22, 1881.
Items most frequently pawned include watches, jewelry, or cutlery, of gold or silver. There are also tickets for more unusual items: Bessie Homan and Elizabeth Honan, of Chapel, both pledged their sealskin jackets, for 6 months. Sarah Graham, of Beanthwaite, pledged opera glasses and a "clarionette." Also pawned were a Brussels carpet, and a piece of silk and velvet. Some of the pawners were unable to write and could only sign with an 'x', which was attested with the signature of the pawnbroker. Given the focus on jewelry in the present volume, it is possible that Collis kept other volumes to record transactions for other categories of objects. - Subject Terms:
- Clocks and watches -- Great Britain.Collis, Isaac Mossop, 1852 or 1853–Jewelry -- Great Britain.Loans, Personal -- Great Britain.Pawnbrokers -- Great Britain.Pawnbroking -- Great Britain.Whitehaven (England) -- Economic conditions.
- Form/Genre:
- Pawnbroker's tickets.
Account books.
Blank forms.
Ephemera. - Export:
- XML
- IIIF Manifest:
- JSON