Home1778 Edition

MESSENGERS

Volume 7 · 243 words · 1778 Edition

are certain officers chiefly employed under the direction of the secretaries of state, and always in readiness to be sent with all kinds of dispatches foreign and domestic. They also, by virtue of the secretaries warrants, take up persons for high treason, or other offences against the state. The prisoners they apprehend are usually kept at their own houses, for each of which they are allowed 6s. 8d. per day, by the government: and when they are sent abroad, they have a stated allowance for their journey, viz. 30l. for going to Paris, Edinburgh, or Dublin; 25l. for going to Holland, and to other places in the same proportion; part of which money is advanced, for the expense of their journey. Their standing salary is 45l. per annum; and their posts, if purchased, are deemed worth 300l. The messengers wait 20 Messengers, at a time, monthly, and are distributed as follows, viz. four at court, five at one secretary's office, five at another, two at the third for North Britain, three at the council-office, and one at the lord chamberlain's of the household.

Scotland. See Law, no clviii. 16.

Messengers of the Exchequer, are four officers who attend the exchequer, in the nature of pursuivants, and carry the lord treasurer's letters, precepts, &c.

Messenger of the Press, a person who, by order of the court, searches printing-houses, book-sellers shops, &c. in order to discover the printers or publishers of seditious books, pamphlets, &c.