An Exact and Necessary CATALOGUE OF PENSIONERS IN THE Long PARLIAMENT. TOGETHER, With their several Gratuities, Rewards, and Salaries, bestowed upon Themselves, out of the Ruins of KING, and Kingdom, (not for Secret, but) for Public Service, (if you will believe them) as Mr. William Prinn, (a Member in the same Parliament, and a restless Stickler in all those Revolutions) and the History of Independency (Printed in the Year 1648) informs us. Which may serve for an Answer to the Preface to the History of The Standing Army. THE Speaker (Lenthall) 7730 l. per An. and 6000 l. given him at one time besides. Bulstrode Whitlock, Commissioner of the Great-Seal, worth 1500 l. per An. and 2000 l. given him besides. Edmund Prideaux, 7200 l. per An. Roger Hill 2200 l. per An. Francis R●●s 1200 l. per An. Humphrey Sa●●ay 200 l per An. john Lile 800 l per An. Oliver St. john, hath the pasing of all Pardons upon Commissions worth 40000 l. And by Ordinance of Parliament both Attorney and Solicitor to the King, worth what he pleased to make it; and what that might probably be, shall not be here estimated; it being well known they were always tender Conscienced, in the concerns of profit especially Sir William Allison 1600 l. per An. Thomas Hoile 1200 l. per An. Thomas Pury Sen. 400 l. per An. and 3000 l. given him besides. Thomas Pury jun. 200 l. per An. William Ellis 200 l. per An. Miles Corbet 1700 l. per An. john Goodwin 700 l. per An: Sir Thomas Widdrington 1500 l. per An. Edward Bish 600 l. per An. Walter Strickland 5000 l. Nicholas Love 2000 l. per An. Sir Gilbert Gerrard, Paymaster to the Army, and had 3 d. per pound allowed him; which at least amounted to 12000 l. per An. besides 60000 l. given him, and 1200 l. per An. Gilbert Gerrard, his Son, 500 l. per An. john Selden, 5000 l. given him, of which he received 2500. john Bond made Master of Trinity-Hall in Cambridge. Sir Benjamin Rudlard had 5000 l. given him. Lucas Hodges made Customer of 〈◊〉 Sir john Hipsley had the keeping of three of the King's Parks, viz. Marrowbone, Hampton, and Bushey-Parks; and 2000 l. given him besides. Sir Thomas Walsingham a great part of the Lord Dorset's Estate given him; and he cut down 4000 Timber-Trees of it. Benjamin Valentine 5000 l. given him. Sir Henry Heyman 5000 l. given him. Dennis Holl●s 5000 l. given him. Nathaniel Bacon 3000 l. given him. john Steevens 1000 l. given him. Henry Smith 2000 l. per An. Robert Renolds got 20000 l. by the purchase of Bishops-Lands; and ●ad 400 l. per An. and 2000 l. given him besides. Sir John Clotworthy Treasurer for Ireland; and charged by the Army with defrauding the State of 40000 l. John Ash 14000 l. given him; and what was worth all, was made Great Chair man at Goldsmiths-Hall. John Lenthall (the Speaker's Son) 2000 l. per An. Francis Allen (made Commissioner for the Customs of London) formerly a poor Goldsmith in Fleet Street. Gil●● Green had Sir Thomas Daws his Estate given him. Francis Pierpoint had the Archbishop of York's Lands in Nottingham given him. William Pierpoint had 47000 l. given him. John Blackstone had 15000 l. and 200 l. per An. given him: S●awine had 2000 l. given him. Isaac Penningt●n 7000 l. besides store of Bishop's Lands given him. J●hn Palmer made Master of All-Souls in Oxford. Thomas Ceely, long a Prisoner for Debt, helped out by the Parliament, and made Recorder of Bridgwater. Thomas Moor, made an Officer in the Customhouse. Samuel Vassel, 1000 l. given him. Oliver Cromwell 4000 l. per An. Sir William Brereton 2000 l. per An. Thomas Wait, Governor of Burley; and has thriven so well by it, as from Nothing, to be able to purchase 500 l. per annum. Sir Oliver Luke, Colonel of Horse; and in a fair way to retrieve his decayed Estate. Sir Samuel Luke, Colonel, and Scout-Master for the Counties of Bedford, etc. Thomas Gell, Lieutenant-Colonel, and made Recorder of Derby. Valentine Walton, Colonel, and Governor of Lime-Regis. Richard Norton, Colonel, and Governor of Southampton. Edward Harvey, (late a poor Silkman,) Colonel; and had given him the Bishop of London's Manor at Fulham. Edward Rositer, Colonel, and General of the Lincolnshire Forces, and Governor of Belvoyr-Castle. Sir Michael Livesey, Colonel, Sequestrator, and Plunder-Master-General of Kent. Henry Ireton, Colonel and Commissary-General. Richard Salway, Colonel, formerly a Grocer's Man. I. Birch, once a Carrier, now a Colonel, which he found to be the best Employment; and got so plentifully by it, that he may well serve in succeeding Parliaments gratis. Thomas Rainsborough, (a Skipper of Lime-Regis,) Colonel, Governor of Woodstock, and Vice-Admiral of England. Bobert Black, Col. Governor of Taunton. Francis Russell, Col. Rowland Wilson, Colonel. Robert Harley, Colonel. Richard Brown, Major-General, and Governor of Abingdon. Peter Temple, Captain of a Troop of Horse. john Venus, Colonel, and Governor of Windsor, had 4000 l. given him. Algernoon Sidney, Governor of Dover-Castle. Richard Ingoldsby, Colonel, Governor of Oxford. John Hutchinson, Colonel, Governor of Nottingham. Sir John Palgrave, Colonel. Edmund Ludlow, Governor of Warder-Castle. Cornelius Holland, 1600 l. per annum. Philip Skippon, Serjeant-Major-General of the Army, Major-General of London; and had 1000 l. per annum, Lands of Inheritance, given him. Charles Fleetwood, Colonel. Thomas Westrow, nothing worth, until a Captain, and Parliament-Man had the Bishop of Worcester's Manor of Hartlerow. Henry Martin, Colonel of a Regiment of Horse, and a Regiment of Whores. Nathaniel Fiennes, Colonel, (Governor of Bristol once;) thereby hangs a Tail. Anthony Stapley, Colonel, Governor of Chichester. Alexander Rigby, Colonel, Governor of Boulton. Charles Pym, Captain of a Troop of Horse. Sir Arthur Haslerig, Colonel, Governor of Newcastle; and had the Bishop of Durham's Manor of Aukland, and 6500 l. given him. William Gibson, Colonel. Sir Thomas Middleton, Major-General for Denbigh, and five other Counties. Godfrey Boswell, Colonel. Lord Grace of Grooby, had the Queen's Manor of Holdenby, and made a great Fall of the Woods. Sir William Constable, Governor of Gloucester; he sold his Estate to Sir Marmaduke Langdale, for 25000 l. and was restored to it again by Parliament, without returning a Penny of the Money back. Sir William Purefoy, Colonel, and Governor of Coventry; he fought valiantly against the Market-Cross at Warwick, and the Monuments in St. Mary's Church there, for which he had 1500 l. given him; but when he should have fought with the Enemy, he hid himself in a Cornfield, which made a Waterman at the Temple-Stairs (that 〈…〉 his Soldier) refuse 〈…〉. Sir Edward Hungerford, 1500 l. per annum. Herbert Morley, Colonel, Plunder-master of Surrey. John Moor, Colonel, and had for some time the Benefit of Passes out of London. Walter Long, Colonel, had 5000 l. given him: Sir— Waller, General; he lost two Armies, yet a Gainer by the Employment. John Alured, Colonel. Michael Oldsworth, Governor of Pembroke and Montgomery, had 3000 l. per annum given him, and was Keeper of Windsor-park. Thomas Scot, (a Brewer's Clerk once,) had Lambeth-House. Ashurst, had 1000 l. given him, and had the Clerk of the Peace's Place for Lancashire. And all the ●●●16 Members, by Account, gave themselves 4 l. per Week each, which is 1●7308 l. per annum. LONDON, Printed, Not for the Commonwealth-Printer in St. Bartholomew-Close, 1699.