Queen Elizabeth Ran a Lottery and One Prize Was a Get Out of Jail Free Card

As you wait with baited breath for your lottery numbers to be called out, spare a thought for the people who took part in England’s first state lottery in the 16th century. Seen as an ideal solution to fund much-needed port infrastructure and investment in the English Navy, Elizabeth I gave the go-ahead for a harebrained scheme to sell lottery tickets. The prizes even included the Elizabethan-era equivalent of a get out of jail free card.

While the accession of Elizabeth I had been welcomed in 1558, the Catholic threat in Europe began to take its toll. Dependent as the economy was on the cloth trade which made up two-thirds of England’s exports, Elizabeth had to put the country, and especially England’s coastline, ports and fleet, in order to stave of any Catholic invasion and invest in sea trade with the New World.

Such a project was going to require vast funds. Brainchild of Sir William Cecil, her Secretary of State, the lottery seemed like just the ticket. The idea itself wasn’t new, and the Low Countries (now known as the Netherlands) had been having success using a lottery system in order to fund infrastructure projects.

In 2010, a curious artifact came up for auction in London. It was a two-page letter to Sir John Spencer, written by Queen Elizabeth I herself, with clear instructions on the sale of 400,000 lots costing 10 shillings a piece. This “rich lotterie general” was promoted on posters throughout London from August 1567, and soon tickets were available in a project…

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