[1143] Reports by the Commissioners for the British Fisheries, 1848-51. Parl. Papers, Sess. 1856.

[1144] Reports of the Commissioners for the British Fisheries, 1852, 1853, 1862.

[1145] Report of the Commissioners appointed to Enquire into the Sea Fisheries of the United Kingdom, I. lxix. (1866).

[1146] Convention between Her Majesty and the Emperor of the French, relative to the Fisheries in the seas between Great Britain and France. Signed at Paris, 11th November 1867. Art. I. “British fishermen shall enjoy the exclusive right of fishery within the distance of three miles from low-water mark, along the whole extent of the coasts of the British Islands; and French fishermen shall enjoy the exclusive right of fishery within the distance of three miles from low-water mark along the whole extent of the coast of France, the only exception to this rule being that part of the coast of France which lies between Cape Carteret and Point Meinga. The distance of three miles fixed as the general limit for the exclusive right of fishery upon the coasts of the two countries shall, with respect to bays, the mouths of which do not exceed ten miles in width, be measured from a straight line drawn from headland to headland. The miles mentioned in the present Convention are geographical miles, whereof sixty make a degree of latitude.” In neither of the conventions was it expressly said that the ten-mile closing-line for bays was to be measured from low-water mark of the headlands, but it was so declared in the Act of 1843, 6 & 7 Vict., c. 79.

[1147] 31 & 32 Vict., c. 45.

[1148] London Gazette, 9th Feb. 1869. C. E. Fryer, The Relation of the State with Fishermen and Fisheries. Parl. Papers, Commerc., 24 (1882), p. 1.

[1149] 46 & 47 Vict., c. 22, sec. 30.

[1150] 6 & 7 Vict., c. 79, s. vi.

[1151] 5 & 6 Vict., c. 106.

[1152] Parl. Papers, Sess. 1867-68, Fisheries (Ireland), 135.