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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 3

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213
From Daniel Joy
Joy, Daniel RTP
Reading-Furnace1 May 22nd 1776 Gentlemen,

I2 recd. your Esteemed favour of the 15th Instant per Col: Bird directing me to attend the proving &c. the cannon made at sd. Col:s Furnace. You may assure your selves I shall attend that service faithfully when ever it is needfull & direct the same in such a manner as I hope will give general satisfaction to your Honourable Board. If you should think proper to direct me to attend the proving the cannon that will be made at Col: Grubb Furnace3 I belive shall be able to attend there likwise and shall account it as an additional favour confered on your Hble: Servt.

Daniel Joy

N.B. Since the recept of your’s I have been twice at Col: Birds but have not had the pleasure of seeing him. He happined to be gon just before my arrvil. He have not got any Powder up. but I understand he intends to get some from the committee at Reading to prove 3 or 4 of his guns. I expect to be in Philada. on Sunday next when shall waite on one of your board to know what further commands you may have. I should be glad you’ll please send up with the Powder a Quire of Paper for cartherages. yours &c.

D.J.

RC ; internal address: “To the Honble. Committee of Congress for Cannon”; addressed: “To The Honble. Robert Treat Paine In Philada. per favour of Mr. Holt.”

1.

For the history of the Reading Furnace, see Estelle Cremers, Reading Furnace, 1736 (Elverson, Pa., 1986).

2.

Capt. Daniel Joy, an Englishman, was employed by Pennsylvania to supervise the iron furnaces and to ready them for production. He arrived at Reading Furnace on Mar. 1, 1776, and by Mar. 16 had scheduled the first casting. Although his first attempt at Reading failed with a burst cannon, Joy continued his work with the furnaces through 1776 (Cremers, Reading Furnace, 66).

214 3.

Col. Curtis Grubb and his brother Peter jointly owned and operated the Hopewell Forge and Cornwall Furnace, both in Lancaster County, inherited from their father. Although Curtis advertised for the sale of his two-third’s share in the furnace and two associated furnaces in May 1775, the brothers were still in partnership the following year. Both brothers held commissions as colonels during the Revolution, Curtis with the Second Battalion and Peter with the Eighth. Curtis also served as a member of the House of Representatives and on the provincial Council of Safety (Forges and Furnaces in the Province of Pennsylvania [Philadelphia, 1914], 82, 85; Pennsylvania Gazette, May 10, Oct. 11, 1775, Aug. 21, Sept. 11, 1776; Pennsylvania Packet, Dec. 17, 1777).