2B0 
StatzstiOf, 
The whole annual income of the"! 
people (1805) including reve- ( 
nues, resources and earnings }> / 248,000,000 lS1078,920,0a€i 
of individuals, of every des- • 
crijition. J 
Valuation of all the real and per- 
sonal property m Great Britain 3,000,000,000 § 13,320,000,000 
Of ^ Bank Dollars,” as they are called, there were 
stamped and issued in 1797 » - - - 2,325,099^ . 
Ditto 1804 - - - - 1,419,484 
Ditto 1809—10 - - - 1,073,051 
By Charles II. gold and silver was coined to the value 
By James II. - ^ - 
Anne ^ « 
George 
George IL gold 1 1,662,2 1 6 > 
silver 301,360 J 
George III. before Decem- 
ber 31, 1780 gold 30,457,457"] 
silver 7,480 j 
From 1780 to 1802, gold 33,310,832 J> 
silver 56,473 [ 
1802 to March 25, 1810 gold 22,445,258j 
Whole coinage since ^ the restoration,’ A. D. 1660 — 
equal to ; 
of / 7,524,105 
2,737,637 
2,691,625 
8,725,921 
11,966,576 
86,277,500 
532,459,730 
Revenue, Taxes, &c. 
The nett revenue, payable into the 
exchequer, for the year 1810, 
was /70,235,792 
The loans for the same year pro- 
duced in addition 
Poor rates in England, 1810 1 6,500,000 
Amount of tythes in do. 1 5,000,000 
The whole receifit of the clergy in England may be 
estimated at 
There are 2 archbishops and 24 
bishops in England, whose re-- 
annual receipt is at least 1 120,000 
In England and Wales there are nearly 600 livings 
as they are called, under 50/. fier annum — of 
which 1071 do not exceed 10/., and 1467, 20/. 
The proportion of the land tax of Scotland, com- 
pared Y/ith that of England ; is as 1 to 1 4— 
311,344,695 
5 59,922,777 
^ 28,860,000 
22,220,000 1^ 
‘ -'Ir, 
44,444,444 • |' 
■I 
532,8p0 P: ' 
