
HANAPER OFFICE – THE DUKE OF CHANDOS AND CORONATION OF GEORGE II Abstract of accounts and record of warrants issued during the years 1728 to 1733, Hanaper Office, 1727-1734 [compiled c.1734/5]
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HANAPER OFFICE – THE DUKE OF CHANDOS AND CORONATION OF GEORGE II
Footnotes
'FOR INGROSSING THE DECLARATION & THE KING'S CORONATION OATH... FOR HIS MAJESTY TO SIGN' – ACCOUNTS KEPT FOR HANDEL'S PATRON, WILLIAM BRYDGES, DUKE OF CHANDOS, in his capacity as Clerk of the Hanaper (he is named on p.39 under a warrant of 14 June 1733: "His Grace the Duke of Chandos Clerk or Keeper of His Majesty's Hanaper in Chancery Craves the Usual Allowance of Parchment"). Chandos had bought the reversion of the office in 1715 for his life and those of his two sons, the grant maturing on 30 July 1728. His Deputy is named, in a claim for stationery made at Michaelmas 1732, as Thomas More.
The Hanaper Officer (the word deriving from the wicker hamper in which writs and the like were originally stored) was the department, under the Clerk of the Hanaper, of the Chancery into which were paid fees for the sealing of charters, patents, etc., and which was responsible for issuing certain writs under the Great Seal; the office of Clerk being abolished in 1832. The records of the Hanaper from 1752 to 1830 are held by the National Archives, Kew; while Chandos's own papers migrated to Stowe and are now held at the Huntington Library, San Marino, California.