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• An. 16^1. a Servant nam’d Pafqua.^ who made his Cof- 
^ fee, which he drank two or three Difhes at a time twice or 
^ thrice a day. The fame Year, Ed-uuards came over to England, 
^ and marry ’d the Daughter of one Alderman Hodges, a Mer-- 
‘ chant who liv’d, I think, in Wdlhrook. This Hodges ufed with 
^ great delight to drink Coffee with Edwards \ fo that it is likely 
^ that this Ednjjards was the firfl: that brought Coffee into Eng- 
‘ land 5 altho’ I am inform’d, that Dr. Harvey, the famous In- 
* venter of the Circulation of the Blood, did frequently ufe it. 
^ After this it grew more in ufe in feveral private Houfes, 
‘ which encouraged Mr. Edvuards to fet up Pafqua for a Coffee- 
^ Man, who got a Shade in the Church Yard of St. Michael's 
^ Cornhill, where he had great Cuftom 5 infomuch that the 
^ Alehoufe- Keepers, fearing that it fliould fpoil their Trade, pe- 
^ tition’d the Lord-Mayor againfl: him, alledging his not being a 
^ Freeman. Up on this Alderman Hodges join’d as a Partner with 
^ Pafqua one Boivman^ his Coachman, who was made free 5 
^ upon which they liv’d unmolefled in the fime Place j where 
^ hh.Rafal found them in the Year 16^^. But fome time 
' after this, Pafqua, for fome Mifdemeanour, run away, and 
^ Bovjman had the foie Trade, and managed it fo well, that by 
^ his Profits, and the Generofity of his Cuftomers, who contri- 
‘ buted Sixpence a-peice, to the number of almoft a thoufand, 
‘ he turn’d his Shade into a Houfe j and when he died, left his 
^ Wife, who had been Alderman Hodges’s Cook-Maid, pretty 
rich : however, fhe dy’d poor not many Years fince. 
‘ John Painter was Bowman’s firft Apprentice, and out of his 
‘ Time in 166^. Bowman died in 166^. and after one Year 
^ his Wife left the Fdoufe to one Batler, whofe Daughter marry’d 
^ Humphrey Hodskins, Bowman’s fecond Apprentice, who was with 
^ him Monks March in This Humphrey liv’d long 
^ in St. Peter’s Alley in Cornhill, and died not many Years fince, 
^ and left there his Widow', Batler’s Daughter, from whom I had 
^ this Account.’ Thus Mx . Hou^Jton and it will eafily ap- 
pear, by the bare reading of this Relation, that he has took fuf- 
ficient pains not to be impos’d on in any of the Fads he mentions. 
Mr. Bradley has however publifh’d another Account of the Effa- 
blifliment of Coffee in England, which I fliall likewife fet down 
here, leaving him' to reconcile it with Mr. Houghton’s in the beffc 
manner he can. ‘ We are certain, fays he, that the Ufe of Coffee 
was not known in Engl a?id till the Year i<^5 7. at which time 
^ Mr. Daniel Edwards, a Turkey Merchant, in his Return from 
‘ Smyrna to London, brought over with him one Pafqua Rofee^ a 
1 ‘ Ragufean 
