October 2016 Damn. The publication and launch of the long awaited Collier Letters edited by Dr Richard Saville is scheduled for the middle of October when I’ll be in France. I’ve been waiting for the publication of this volume from the Sussex Record Society for almost two years – ever since I first started thinking about writing a biography of Collier. I first came across ‘Mister Hastings’ while researching my book ‘The Smuggling Life of Gabriel Tomkins’. Collier was Surveyor of the Kent Customs Service from the 1730’s and thus actually employed Tomkins – a former smuggler – as Keeper of the Dartford Customs House. The thing about Collier is that he was a voluminous correspondent, leaving behind some 3000 letters written between around 1714 and his death in 1760. I’d spent several hours in the Hastings Library looking through the letters for mentions of Tomkins or the Hawkhurst Gang of smugglers with whom Tomkins rode after he was kicked out of the ...
November 2016 Back from France, and there’s a package in the post from the Sussex Record Society. Yes, it’s The Letters of John Collier of Hastings 1731-1746 edited by Richard Saville. Since deciding to write a biography of Collier I’d done a bit of research on-line and got a rough idea of his life. Born in Eastbourne to an Innkeeper in 1685, John Collier had done incredibly well for himself. By the time he was 20 he had apparently qualified as a lawyer and had moved to Hastings to take up his first job at clerk to the town council. Being a Cinque Port, Hastings council was known as a Corporation and the councillors as Jurats. Collier was soon elected a Jurat and became Mayor for the first time in 1719. He was involved with the Corporation as Clerk or Mayor for the rest of his life, but also carried on a legal practice in London, also buying and holding a sinecure as Usher and Cryer of the court of King's Bench . He became ...