Description | Including a letter in 1706 when Charles upbraided his brother regarding his debts, refused to provide him with more money unless he provided an adequate security for it and stated that he was informed that the houses William had sold him in Warwick for £400 were not worth £300. Other letters refer to Charles taking William's eldest son as his apprentice and his dislike of taking persons in the household who have not had the smallpox because in London one must expect to catch it sooner or later. With one letter from Mary Savage at Tachbrook to her sister, 1716 |