Passenger Vessels Act 1803

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Act of Parliament
Commencement
1803
Repealed1826
Status: Repealed
Text of statute as originally enacted

The Act

infectious diseases such as typhus
continued.

This act was established under humanitarian pretences, but the more practical and desired effect was to raise the cost of passage to prevent as many as possible from leaving. Landlords who feared the emigration of their tenants lobbied extensively for this piece of legislation, and where one could previously travel to Canada for £3–4,[3] the price for the same passage was in some cases raised to £10 or more (equivalent to £970 in 2021). The ability to move abroad was subsequently limited to a small class of people until it was repealed in 1826.

Notes and references

  1. ^ McGeachy. Argyll, 1730-1850. John Donald. 2005. p 333. Edmond, Migrations: Journeys in Time and Place, 2013, p 53. "Passenger Vessels Act": Cregreen (ed), Argyll Estate Instructions, (1964) 1 Publications of the Scottish Historical Society (Fourth Series) 73; The Canada Year Book 1957-58, p 166; Merkin, Marine Insurance: A Legal History, Edward Elgar, 2021, p cxli.
  2. ^ (1930) 81 Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire 263. Allen and Thompson (eds), Contrast and Connection: Bicentennial Essays in Anglo-American History, Ohio University Press, 1976, p 366. "Passenger Act": (1940) 2 The Cambridge History of the British Empire 406; Chester, The English Administrative System, 1780-1870, Clarendon Press, 1981, pp 110 & 141; (1970) British Book News 486; (1969) 2 Essays in Scotch-Irish History 56.
  3. ^ Approximately £200 in 2001 pounds, according to the price indices in House of Commons Research Paper 02/44, "Inflation: the value of the pound 1750–2001" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 June 2009., 11 July 2002