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Collection Reference Number GLC01450.446.09
From Archive Folder Collection pertaining to Jacobite resistance in France 
Title Earl of Cadogan to Edward Bourke about unreliable information, treasonous letters and Huske in Cambray
Date 21 November 1716
Author Cadogan, William, Earl (cb. 1672-1726)  
Recipient Bourke, Edward  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Discusses previous correspondence related to a Jacobite plot (refer to other items in the GLC01450.446 collection). Mentions the unreliable nature of sending information through the post, and promises Bourke a pension he previously requested in return for information he supplied Cadogan regarding Jacobite treason. States that he will send his aide-de-camp, Colonel Huske, to Cambray to deliver Bourke's money. Mentions treasonous letters Bourke previously discovered between lords in England and Mr. Sheldon (possibly Dominick Sheldon). Promises Bourke that no one should question Huske's presence in Cambray, since he will be there under the pretense of conducting business with the Archbishop of Cambray. Bourke had already sent a letter 18 November informing Cadogan that his information was false (refer to GLC01450.446.08).
Subjects Spying  Finance  Pension  Global History and Civics  Rebellion  France  Treason  
People Bourke, Edward (fl. 1700-1730)  Cadogan, William, Earl (cb. 1672-1726)  James, Prince of Wales (1688-1766)  Clanricarde, John Bourke, Earl of (1642-1722)  
Place written The Hague, Netherlands
Theme Foreign Affairs; Government & Politics
Sub-collection The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859
Additional Information General Dominique Sheldon served as commander of Roi d’Angleterre, a regiment raised by Stuart in 1791; he fought in the Jacobite and French armies from 1689-1721. Edward was the son of John Bourke, Earl of Clanricarde. Cadogan was known for his suppression of Jacobite uprising.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859
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