<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><ead xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9 https://www.loc.gov/ead/ead.xsd"><eadheader countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" langencoding="iso639-2b" repositoryencoding="iso15511"><eadid countrycode="US" mainagencycode="US-ViU-L" url="https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/131338"/><filedesc><titlestmt><titleproper>Stannery Court Library commonplace book<num>MSS.84.10</num></titleproper></titlestmt><publicationstmt><publisher>Arthur J. Morris Law Library Special Collections</publisher><p id="logostmt"><extref xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:href="https://www.law.virginia.edu/sites/default/files/styles/1_scale_large/public/images/uva_law_centered_K.png" xlink:show="embed" xlink:type="simple"/></p><address><addressline>Arthur J. Morris Law Library</addressline><addressline>580 Massie Road</addressline><addressline>University of Virginia</addressline><addressline>Charlottesville, Virginia 22903</addressline><addressline>archives@law.virginia.edu</addressline><addressline>URL: <extptr xlink:href="http://archives.law.virginia.edu/" xlink:show="new" xlink:title="http://archives.law.virginia.edu/" xlink:type="simple"/></addressline></address></publicationstmt></filedesc><profiledesc><creation>This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on <date>2026-05-08 07:04:07 +0000</date>.</creation><langusage>Description is written in: <language langcode="eng" scriptcode="Latn">English, Latin script</language>.</langusage><descrules>Describing Archives: A Content Standard</descrules></profiledesc></eadheader><archdesc level="collection">
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    <unittitle>Stannery Court Library commonplace book</unittitle>
    <unitid>MSS.84.10</unitid>
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    <physdesc altrender="whole">
      <extent altrender="materialtype spaceoccupied">1 items</extent>
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    <unitdate datechar="creation" normal="1817/1817">1817</unitdate>
    <langmaterial>
      <language langcode="eng" scriptcode="Latn">English</language>
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  <scopecontent id="aspace_e4401b0e950ac04630dd8fdbdf9ef116">
    <head>Scope and Contents</head>
<p>
This commonplace book, written in 1817, contains abstracts from the sixth edition of Charles Fearne's <emph render="italic">An Essay on the Learning of Contingent Remainders and Executory Devises</emph> edited by Charles Butler, and from the third edition of Francis Williams Sanders' <emph render="italic">An Essay on Uses and Trusts</emph>. It is in at least two hands and may have been written over a period of years.</p><p>The volume came from the Library of the Stannary Court in Wales. It has the bookplate of John Lucius Dampier, an English barrister who was Vice-Warden of the Stannaries Court. The Stannary Courts date from the thirteeth century when they were established by King John to resolve issues of ownership and control of mining. In 1896 they were abolished and their responsibiliies transferred to new county courts.</p>  </scopecontent>
  <acqinfo id="aspace_92d14cdcbac5aaaabc6b08895ef6bc5d">
    <head>Immediate Source of Acquisition</head>
<p>Gift of Neill H. Alford Jr. in 1984.</p>  </acqinfo>
  <bioghist id="aspace_90fa033096aef950d7699db2c5fe3c99">
    <head>Biographical / Historical</head>
<p>The Stannary Parliaments and Stannary Courts were legislative and legal institutions in Cornwall and in Devon (in the Dartmoor area), England. The Stannary Courts administered equity for the region's tin-miners and tin mining interests, and they were also courts of record for the towns dependent on the mines. Executive authority in stannary areas was exercised by the Lord Warden of the Stannaries.</p><p>The separate and powerful government institutions available to the tin miners reflected the enormous importance of the tin industry to the English economy during the Middle Ages. Special laws for tin miners pre-date written legal codes in Britain, and ancient traditions exempted everyone connected with tin mining in Cornwall and Devon from any jurisdiction other than the Stannary Courts in all but the most exceptional circumstances.</p><p>As the tin mines of Cornwall and Devon lost their economic importance during the 18th and 19th centuries, their political institutions also waned in power and ultimately faded away, until recent efforts to restore them.</p><p>Charles Fearne was born in London in 1742, and educated at Westminster School. His 1772 work, <emph render="italic">Essay on the Learning of Contingent Remainders and Executory Devices</emph>, is deemed to have done "more than any other to preserve the Rule in Shelley's Case as black letter law (as distinguished from a rule of construction)."</p><p>Francis William Sanders was born in 1769. After some years of pupilage to John Stanley, attorney-general of the Leeward Islands, and M.P. for Hastings, 1784–1801, he began practice as a certificated conveyancer. Sanders was author of a professional treatise of deservedly high repute entitled <emph render="italic">An Essay on Uses and Trusts, and on the Nature and Operation of Conveyances at Common Law, and of those which derive their effect from the Statute of Uses</emph>, London, 1791, 1799.</p>  </bioghist>
  <controlaccess>
    <genreform authfilenumber="300027093" source="aat">Commonplace books</genreform>
    <geogname authfilenumber="sh92005317" source="lcsh">Wales -- History -- 19th Century</geogname>
    <persname rules="dacs" source="local">Fearne, Charles, 1742-1794</persname>
    <persname rules="dacs" source="local">Sanders, Francis William, 1769-1831</persname>
    <persname rules="dacs" source="local">Dampier, John Lucius, 1792-1853</persname>
  </controlaccess>
  <dsc><c01 id="aspace_10796d50788837dfe59794aa6603fe37" level="item"><did><unittitle>Commonplace Book from Stannery Court Library, Wales</unittitle><unitid type="ark"><extref xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:href="https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/131108" xlink:show="new">Archival Resource Key</extref></unitid><unitid type="ark-superseded"><extref xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:href="https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/131103" xlink:show="new">Previous Archival Resource Key</extref></unitid><unitid type="ark-superseded"><extref xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:href="https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/131102" xlink:show="new">Previous Archival Resource Key</extref></unitid><unitid type="ark-superseded"><extref xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:href="https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/131099" xlink:show="new">Previous Archival Resource Key</extref></unitid><unitid type="ark-superseded"><extref xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:href="https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/131098" xlink:show="new">Previous Archival Resource Key</extref></unitid><unitid type="ark-superseded"><extref xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:href="https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/131097" xlink:show="new">Previous Archival Resource Key</extref></unitid><unitid type="ark-superseded"><extref xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:href="https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/69338" xlink:show="new">Previous Archival Resource Key</extref></unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/4/archival_objects/75438</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" normal="1817/1817">1817</unitdate><container id="aspace_55cecfff027474370b5c6e5dd815b703" label="Manuscripts">MSS 84-11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c8814d8f276a17aab78e2182e370d710"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>This commonplace book, written in 1817, contains abstracts from the sixth edition of Charles Fearne's An Essay on the Learning of Contingent Remainders and Executory Devises edited by Charles Butler, and from the third edition of Francis Williams Sanders' An Essay on Uses and Trusts. It is in at least two hands and may have been written over a period of years.</p><p>The volume came from the Library of the Stannary Court in Wales. The Stannary Courts date from the thirteeth century when they were established by King John to resolve issues of ownership and control of mining. In 1896 they were abolished and their responsibilities transferred to new county courts.</p></scopecontent></c01></dsc>
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