Charles Povey
Charles Povey (1652?[1]–4 May 1743) was a British pamphleteer and entrepreneur, who challenged the Royal Mail's postal monopoly by running the "Halfpenny Carriage", a local London postal system similar to William Dockwra's Penny Post. He founded the first joint-stock company for fire insurance, the Exchange House Fire Office[2] later the "Sun Fire Office" that remains in business today as the RSA Insurance Group.
Insurance
Founding the Exchange House Fire Office in 1708, Povey was not long involved with it. In 1709 it became the Company of London Insurers. It was called the "Sun Fire Office", after the fire mark used by Povey. A deal of 1710 saw Povey sell out. The company innovated by insuring both houses and goods.[3]:8
The Sun Fire Office was soon followed by other such companies, which grew more rapidly at the outset.[3]:11 Shares in it were acquired by Royal Exchange Assurance in 1720.[3]:48 Yet the Sun mark lasted for centuries.
The Halfpenny Carriage
The Halfpenny Carriage was a postal service run by Povey in the London area from October 1709, in competition with and undercutting the official Post Office monopoly, which charged a penny per letter. It was closed down by the government, after seven months.[4] Povey was fined, but his systematic use of bellmen was adopted by the Post Office.[5]
Life
Povey was the brother of the Rev. Josiah Povey, parish priest of Telscombe. During the reign of James II of England, he was jailed for writing against the king. At the end of the 17th century he took part in the coal trade. Some years later he operated as a middleman and broker in his Traders' Exchange House, Hatton Garden.[2] The insurance company and its promotional newspaper, mostly on trade topics, were originally offshoots of a labour brokerage he ran.[6]
Publications
Amongst Povey's publications are the following:
- A Challenge to all Jacobites (1689)
- A Challenge in vindication of the Revolution (1690)
- Proposals for raising One Thousand Pounds (1699)
- A Discovery of Indirect Practices in the Coal Trade (1700)
- The unhappiness of England, as to its Trade by Sea and Land truly stated (1701)
- Meditations of a Divine Soul (1703)
- Holy Thoughts of a God-made Man (1704)
- An inquiry into the miscarriages of the four last years reign (1714)
- A tender and hearty address to all the freeholders and other electors of members for the ensuing Parliament of Great Britain & Ireland. (1714)
- English inquisition: or, Money rais'd by the new secret extent law, without act of Parliament (1718)
- Britain's Scheme to make a New Coin of Gold and Silver to give in Exchange for Paper-Money and South-Sea Stock (1720)
- The Secret History of the Sun Fire Office (1733)
- Memorial to obtain Right and Property as promised in Her Majesty's Speech from the Throne, humbly presented to the King, Lords and Commons for the restoration of an Estate and Fortune taken away by the Crown and Parliament, contrary to the Laws of Great Britain (1737)
- The Torments after Death (1740)
- The Virgin in Eden, or the State of Innocency- . . . Presenting a Nobleman, a Student, and Heiress, on their progress from Sodom to Canaan (1741)
- WorldCat Charles Povey search result
Notes
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One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Povey, Charles". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. - Spencer, Mark. "Povey, Charles". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/22639. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- Supple, Barry (1970). The Royal Exchange Assurance: A History of British Insurance 1720–1970. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 8.
- Bond, Richmond P. (2012). New Letters to the Tatler and Spectator. University of Texas Press. p. 70 note 2. ISBN 9780292739871.
- Ménard, Claude; Bertrand, Elodie (2016). The Elgar Companion to Ronald H. Coase. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 252. ISBN 9781782547990.
- Clark, Geoffrey Wilson (1999). Betting on Lives: The Culture of Life Insurance in England, 1695-1775. Manchester University Press. p. 172. ISBN 9780719056758.