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Descrição arquivística
DALHOUSIE JUTE COMPANY
GB 0074 CLC/B/123-19 · Coleção · 1933

Records of the Dalhousie Jute Company, comprising annual report and accounts for 1933.

Sem título
GOUREPORE COMPANY
GB 0074 CLC/B/123-28 · Coleção · 1895-1949

Records of the Gourepore Company, manufacturers of jute, comprising memorandum and articles of association.

Sem título
HARRISONS RAMSAY PROPRIETARY LIMITED
GB 0074 CLC/B/112-081 · Coleção · 1912-1979

Records of Harrisons Ramsay Proprietary Limited, including articles of association; minutes of the board; annual reports; reports on visits to branches; correspondence; memoranda; general reports; financial accounts; summaries of shipments and sales; correspondence regarding arrangements for staff during the Second World War; and papers of various subsidiaries.

Access to records less than 30 years old (or records less than 70 years old which relate to staff) should be sought from Elementis plc (contact details may be obtained from a member of staff).

Sem título
NUDDEA MILLS COMPANY
GB 0074 CLC/B/123-46 · Coleção · 1949

Records of the Nuddea Mills Company, comprising memorandum and articles of association.

Sem título
TOYE AND BROMLEY
GB 0074 CLC/B/227-186 · Coleção · 1873-1890

Financial accounts ledger of Toye and Bromley, yarn, hemp and fibre merchants.

Sem título
Philippart, John: correspondence, 1836
GB 0096 AL231 · Arquivo · 1836

2 letters written to John Philippart, 1836.

(1) From Herman Hendriks of 2 Copthall Chambers, [London], 26 May 1836. Enclosing a document [?printed prospectus of the Haytien Banking Company]: '... if you felt disposed to join the Direction, after I had explained its nature to you, it would afford me pleasure'.

(2) From William Wildey of 3 Agar Street, Strand, [London], 28 Jul 1836. 'You were good enough to say some short time since, that when I was prepared to come before the public, with my substitute for horse-hair, that you would give me a helping hand in your valuable gazette ... I am now in that position, having a large quantity of the cocoa-nut fibre broke up.' Inviting inspection of articles filled with coconut fibre and encloses a printed prospectus which sets out its merits over other kinds of stuffing, with testimonials and a list of institutions using the fibre, including the police, prisons, hospitals and Poor Law Unions.

Both letters are autograph, with signatures.

Sem título