Near the bank
of the River North Tyne a little to the north of Humshaugh stands Haughton
Castle and its associated buildings. On the riverbank itself can be found the
remains of an old paper mill, built by Captain William Smith, the owner of the
nearby castle, in 1788. The flow of the river here is steady and strong, which
is just what you’re looking for if you’re a mill owner.
It is also
rather remote, which is not always good for communications – but it is good for
sneaky goings-on. And, in 1793, just five years after its construction,
Haughton Castle Mill was commissioned by the British government for a rather
special assignment: it was instructed to produce the paper required for the
printing of counterfeit French currency.
There’d been
the little matter of the French Revolution, of course, in 1789, and the new
revolutionary government was struggling to find its feet. One of its most
controversial measures was to introduce as a new currency the ‘Assignat’,
backed by the value of property seized from the Catholic Church. Obviously, the
Church wasn’t too happy about this illegal seizure and they, together with what
was left of the French nobility, opposed the new currency system. To add to the
new regime’s woes many foreign countries began producing forged assignats to
flood the market and thus destabilise the French economy. Belgium, Switzerland
and Britain were at the forefront in this regard, and one of the many paper
mills chosen for the project was that on the bank of the North Tyne at
Haughton. Its remoteness no doubt contributed to its selection and, for around
two years during 1793-95, a good deal of the paper with which the dodgy notes
were made was turned out here. The printing
process was carried out elsewhere, though; then the notes were sent to Flanders
with the British Army.
By the many
and various anti-assignat methods thus employed across Europe, the new-fangled
French revolutionary currency was indeed brought down. Introduced in 1789, it
devalued steadily and was scrapped in 1796. By the time Napoleon I became
emperor in 1804 it was a distant memory. So you could argue that the undercover
activity at Haughton Castle Mill in the 1790s helped bring the little dictator
to power.
One of the
moulds for making the paper notes still survives and is in the possession of the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne. The mill itself had fallen out
of use by the 1880s, though much of the fabric of the building survives.
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