Merchants & Traders

The men who built the running trade, defended it, and lost everything when the Crown stepped in.

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The Trade

An Island Built on Commerce

Before 1765, the Isle of Man was a trading island. Not illegally — or at least, not under its own law. The Lord of Mann set the customs rates, and the rates were low. Goods flowed in from Europe and out again to England, Scotland, and Ireland at prices that undercut the British tariff wall. The merchants of Douglas, Castletown, and Peel grew wealthy. The Crown called it smuggling. The Manx people called it business.

The Revestment of 1765 ended all of it. The British Treasury bought the island’s customs revenue, imposed its own tariffs, and turned the running trade from a living into a crime. The merchants who had built their fortunes on lawful Manx commerce found themselves ruined, prosecuted, or forced to reinvent themselves overnight.

These are some of the men whose names run through the archive — the traders who shaped the island’s economy and whose world the Revestment destroyed.

“The keys of a merchant’s warehouse were the keys to the island’s prosperity.”
Key Figures

The Men at the Centre

c.1709–1787
Merchant, landowner, and the most documented private individual in eighteenth-century Mann. His Letter Books, preserved at the Manx Museum, are the single most important primary source for this period. Speaker of the House of Keys, he carried the island’s case to London — and lost.
fl. 1750s–1790s
Manx merchant and profiteer who exploited the Revestment for personal advantage. His name appears 41 times across the archive. Where Moore lost, Taubman adapted — and prospered.
fl. 1760s
Castletown merchant, sent alongside George Moore to London in March 1765 carrying the Keys’ resolution and their hopes. What they carried back was the Revestment Act.
The English Merchants

Whitehaven and the Lobby for Revestment

Not all the merchants in this story were Manx. The Whitehaven traders who competed against the island’s low-tariff commerce had every reason to want it stopped. The Lutwidges — Walter and Thomas — co-signed the merchants’ memorial to the Treasury calling for the purchase of the island’s sovereignty. They lobbied for Revestment not to help the Manx people but to eliminate them as competitors.

fl. 1750s
Whitehaven merchant who co-signed the merchants’ memorial to the Treasury, calling for the purchase of the island’s sovereignty.
fl. 1750s
Whitehaven merchant who co-signed the merchants’ memorial alongside Walter Lutwidge.
fl. 1770s–1790s
Wealthy Liverpool merchant and shipowner. Elizabeth Betham’s uncle. One of the men who moved goods and capital between Liverpool and Mann.
On the Ground

Traders, Smugglers, and Foreign Residents

The running trade drew men from across Europe to Douglas — Barcelona merchants, Jewish traders from Amsterdam, and local men who worked the harbours and the customs margins. When the Revestment came, their goods were seized, their livelihoods disappeared, and the island that had welcomed them became hostile territory.

c.1590–1661
Sea captain, merchant, and lieutenant-governor under the 7th Earl of Derby. Not a provincial figure — he had gone to sea, built a merchant career, and returned to govern.
fl. 1750s–1760s
Jewish trader in Douglas whose goods were seized in the ordinary course of the Duke’s customs enforcement.
fl. 1759
A merchant of the city of Barcelona, resident in Douglas. Assaulted by a soldier at the house of another merchant in July 1759.
fl. 1761
A Jewish merchant of Douglas, walking with an eminent merchant from Amsterdam when he was assaulted on the street.
fl. 1765–1770s
A Peel man who publicly called Charles Lutwidge ‘an Egregious Smuggler.’ Lutwidge sued for slander. The case collapsed.
fl. 1789
Wealthy Douglas merchant who bought Bemahague from Edward Christian in 1789 — the Christian family home from at least 1643.
 

Continue exploring People

The merchants were the engine of the old economy. Explore the lords who set the customs rates, the governors who enforced them, and the families whose fortunes rose and fell with the trade.

Back to People The Lords of Mann The Governors