the direction of Messrs Roebuck and Garbet, but passed 
                    into other hands. Here they also make white salts and glauber 
                    salts. Fifty men employed, and the works go night and day. 
                    Men are bound under indentures of twenty-one years, which 
                    time they are paid 6s. per week. Oil of vitriol sold at 3 
                    1/2d. per lb., aquafortis at 7|d., and spirit of salt 6d. 
                    per lb. Glauber salts, 12s. per cwt., and white ashes, is. 
                    8d. 
                     
                    CHIEF FISHERY—OYSTERS. 
                    There are ten boats now employed, there were five more recently. 
                    About twenty years ago (1776), 6,000 oysters per day were 
                    frequently dredged by one boat. An agent in Leith purchased 
                    for ten different merchants, and at that period, continuing 
                    ten years, some £2,500 per annum were drawn for oysters 
                    alone. At this time there were sixteen boats engaged from 
                    Cockenzie, eight from Fisherrow, and sixteen from Prestonpans. 
                    An old fisherman informed me that sixty or seventy years ago 
                    oysters were in little estimation. Another residenter said 
                    previous to 1776 only three or four boats were engaged. A 
                    custom house is established here. 
                     
                    
                       
                         BREWERIES. 
                          In 1754 there were sixteen breweries. 
                          only five. Now (1901) there is one.  | 
                        In 1796 there were | 
                       
                     
                     
                    TRADES, PROFESSIONS, ETC., IN 1796. 
                    Clergymen, 1; schoolmasters, 1; private teachers, 3; surgeons, 
                    1; officers of customs, 19; excise officers, 2; brewers, 5; 
                    licensed spirit and ale shops, 32; sailers and salt agents, 
                    14; shopkeepers, 23; gardeners, 18; barbers, 2; smiths, 11; 
                    masons, 16; carpenters, 22; weavers, 13; shoemakers, 19; tailors, 
                    13; watchmakers, 3; ropespinners, 4; candlemakers, 1; bakers, 
                    10; coopers, 2; slaters, 3; midwives, 2; washerwomen, 8; carriers, 
                    4; domestic servants, male, 7; female, 73; farm servants, 
                    male, 24; female, 5; coaldrivers, 3; day labourers, 19; seamen, 
                    20; regular fishermen, 23; employed at potteries, 252; employed 
                    at vitriol works, 188; regular fishery, 94; salt pans, 47; 
                    brick and tile works, 23. 
                     
                    CHAPTER XIV. 
                    POST OFFICE, ETC. 
                    Post Office—Postmasters, etc.: D. Thomson—T. Cleuch—Mr Whyte— 
                    Mrs \Vhyte-Miss Whyte—Royal Bank—Parish Council—Burgh Commissioners—School 
                    Board — Hotel — Inspector of Poor, Registrar, and Heritors' 
                    Clerk—Medical Practitioners—School and Staff—Successful Scholars 
                    — Market Gardeners — Bankton Water Scheme — New Water Supply—New 
                    Congregation Halls—Co-operative Society—Coffee-house and Recreation 
                    Rooms—Public Parks and Bowling Green—The Old Church Clock—Gas 
                    Works. 
                    THERE was a Post Office in Prestonpans long before a similar 
                    institution was established at Tranent. It is recorded that 
                    the good folks there were wont to have their business notes, 
                    love epistles, etc., conveyed to Prestonpans Post Office by 
                    means of the carters who went between the coal pits at the 
                    one place and the various manufactories at the other. The 
                    exact date at which a Post Office was established here is 
                    difficult to ascertain; but the place and the man we know. 
                    The opening of that institution here must have been towards 
                    the close of the 18th century. The first postmaster was David 
                    Thomson, a flourishing merchant, and grandfather of Mr David 
                    Marr. The first Post Office was in the house presently occupied 
                    by Mr Marr, and the letter-box was fixed in that little window 
                    which looks towards the east. The woodwork, with the slit 
                    in it for popping the letters through, was removed a few years 
                    ago. 
                    On the decease of Mr Thomson, Mr Nimmo became postmaster. 
                    The office was then shifted almost opposite to where it is 
                    at present. In 1825 Mr Thomas Cleugh, grandfather of the present 
                    postmistress, became postmaster, when the office was transferred 
                    to the foot of Harlo Hill. Mr Robert Whyte, who attended the 
                    High School, Edinburgh, along with the late Mr William Cadell, 
                    brother to the late Mr Hugh Francis Cadell of Cockenzie, and 
                    through him got into old laird Cadell's office,  |