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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 3

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From John Griffiths
Griffiths, John RTP
Hond. Sir, Newyork June 22d 1776

On receiving yours of the 13th went immediately for Mr. Patricks Furnace in Orange County. Found by the Trial he made that the Mettle tho exceeding Grey was no ways suited for casting Gunns, as what he tried burst in the proving tho more than commonly fortified. Am just this Minute returned & enclose his Letter.

The Price of Pig Iron for some time past in Newyork is as follows

York Money
Andover—sold by Mr. Stewart1 £9.10 per Ton
Stirling—sold by Mr. Hawkhurst2 £11 per Ton
Ancram—Mr. Livingstone’s3 £10 per Ton
Hibernia—Messrs. Murray’s & Co.4 £9 per Ton
Mount Hope—Mr. Faish5 £9 per Ton
Ringwood Charlotteburgh & Longpond, Mr. Erskine6 £9 per ton

And as none of course will convey to Poughkeepsie & deliver it there under Nine Pounds, Mr. Patrick will expect that Price, & the Quantity of one Hundred Tons will be conveyed there from time to time as Oppertunity serves. With Sincere sorrow for the Dissapointment in the Article of Gunn making at Orange Furnace I beg leave to subscribe myself Hond. Sir Your ready & very Hble. Servt.,

John Griffiths
234

RC ; addressed: “The Honble. Rob. Treat Paine Philadelphia”; endorsed in an unidentified hand; postal stamps: “FREE,” “N.York*June 24.”

1.

The Andover Ironworks in Sussex County, New Jersey, were opened about 1760 to take advantage of the nearby mine, “the ore is esteemed of the best quality of any in America.” Archibald Stewart (also spelled Stuart) was associated with the Union Iron Works in 1766 when he was one of the administrators on the estate of John Hacket of the Andover Ironworks and by 1770 was apparently in charge of the Andover works (Forges and Furnaces in the Province of Pennsylvania, 44; Pennsylvania Gazette, Nov. 6, 1766, Oct. 4, 1770, Feb. 8, 1775).

2.

The Sterling Iron Works were operated by W. Hawxhurst (Rita Susswein Gottesman, The Arts and Crafts in New York, 1726–1776. Collections of the New-York Historical Society, vol. 69 [New York, 1938], 217).

3.

Robert Livingston, Jr., operated a forge at Ancram in the Manor of Livingston from at least 1744. In 1760 he built a new forge there and advertised for “Three good Refiners to make bar-iron” (New-York Weekly Journal, Apr. 2, 1744; New-York Mercury, Oct. 27, 1760).

4.

Hibernia Furnace was erected in 1763 or 1764 near Rockaway, N.Y. In 1776, Robert and John Murray, prominent New York merchants, were the agents (Charles S. Boyer, Early Forges & Furnaces in New Jersey [Philadelphia, 1931], 94; Thomas M. Doerflinger, “Hibernia Furnace During the Revolution,” New Jersey History 90[1972]:97–114).

5.

John Jacob Faesch (1729–1799), a Swiss native and ironmaster, erected the Mt. Hope Furnace, three miles north of Dover, N.J., in 1772 [ DAB ; Boyer, Early Forges & Furnaces in New Jersey, 136].

6.

Robert Erskine (1735–1780) was a Scots geographer and hydraulic engineer sent in 1771 to represent a group of British capitalists, investors in the American Iron Company, which owned the Ringwood, Charlotteburgh, and Longpond ironworks in New Jersey, of which Erskine became manager and agent. During the Revolution Erskine took up the patriot cause and was commissioned as geographer and surveyor-general of the Continental Army ( DAB ; Albert H. Heusser, George Washington’s Map Maker: A Biography of Robert Erskine [New Brunswick, N.J., 1966]).