In 1768 Thomas Paine (1737-1809) became an excise officer in Lewes, where he lodged at Bull House with the nonconformist grocer Samuel Ollive, whose daughter Elizabeth he married in 1771. In 1774 the marriage broke up, Paine's business failed and he was dismissed from the excise service. Samuel Ollive had advanced ideas on the equality of women, and his will divided his property equally between his sons and daughters. The Deed of Separation compensated Paine for the loss of his reversionary rights in Ollive's estate with the sum of £45; sufficient for him to live on until October 1774, when armed with a letter from Benjamin Franklin, he set sail for America and world fame.
Item Provenance
Bloomsbury Book Auctions 19 November 2009, lot 278