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Cyfarthfa Papers,
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[William Routh], to William Crawshay (II), Merthyr Tidvil,

Thompson's denial of loss through Bevan's failure; Guest's heavy loss though the failure of Griffith and Lewis, of Bristol the black position in Bristoll where credit is at an end. Routine matters. [Inscribed on Letter 581(a)].

[William Routh], to William Crawshay (II), Merthyr Tidvil,

A list of the new U.S.A. import duties, by which the duty on imported rolled iron is reduced £l. 14s. 0d. per ton; his belief that the expanding population and concomitant demand for public works will improve the iron trade quite apart from the effect of the reduced duty on iron. Routine and personal matters.

W(illia)m Routh, partner in the London House, to William Crawshay, (II), Merthyr Tidvil, to recommend Banks of Joliffe & Banks ...,

W(illia)m Routh, partner in the London House, to William Crawshay, (II), Merthyr Tidvil, to recommend Banks of Joliffe & Banks, as a suitable engineer for the work named by recipient, of whose father's reaction to Letter 87 he gives friendly information. The father's secret intention to make recipient a partner in Hirwaun works, and make George Crawshay a partner in the London House without effect on recipient's share.

W(illia)m Routh, partner in the London House, to William Crawshay, (II), Merthyr Tidvil,

Sends a proxy for voting in the Glamorganshire Canal Company can behalf of recipient's father; and a notice from the London House to Cyfarthfa, terminating the agreement between the two concerns. The desire of recipient's father to decide far himself whether Cyfarthfa should stock its iron, dispose of it at a low price to the London House, or sell direct to the market.

W(illiam) Routh, partner in the London House, to William Crawshay (II), Merthyr Tidvil,

On behalf of recipient's father, and in response to recipient's letter, sends back Letter 86 and intimates that the correspondence over the last three years with George Crawshay, who had been given an eighth share in the London Houses has also been destroyed to remove unpleasant records. The decision to again reduce iron prices to £8 the arrangements between the London House and Cyfarthfa for June; accounting matters.

W(illia)m Routh, (partner in the London House), to William Crawshay (II), Merthyr Tidvil,

The decision of recipient's father to take orders at £5. 10s. but not to allow the circulation of notes to this effect to the trade; the attitude of the father towards Letter 482, the purchase of Hensol, the loan to Harfords, and George Crawshay's wish to retire; the weakness of George Crawshay; his doubt of the father's yielding further at the Balance meeting. The father's hint that his money would not be buried with him as recipient seems to suppose.

W(illia)m Routh, partner in the London House, to William Crawshay (II), Merthyr Tidvil,

Concerning his appointment as sole correspondent and sales conductor under recipient's father, who daily increases in jealousy of interference with regard to prices etc.; an explanation of his attitude to Lenox, Logan, Brunton, the Navy contract, the prices charged to these, and other matters; a request for recipient's opinion of the proposal to buy Blakemore's Melingriffith Works and of the alternative proposition to extends Cyfarthfa for the purpose of making tinplates, sheets and hoops.

W(illia)m Routh, partner in the London House of Richard and William Crawshay to William Crawshay, II, Merthyr Tidvil, also a ...,

W(illia)m Routh, partner in the London House of Richard and William Crawshay to William Crawshay, II, Merthyr Tidvil, also a partner, to announce that Richard Crawshay, dissatisfied with the recent rearrangement of shares in the partnership, is pressing for a larger share for himself, to which recipient's father is disposed to consult if recipient will concur. The illness of recipient's father.

W(illia)m Routh, London, to William Crawshay (II), Merthyr,

Concerning the decision announced in Letter 683, and his agreement with the policy of selling only as much iron as will keep their heads above water (without reducing stocks); the probable increased demand for iron from the U.S.A, where the Northern States must accede to the demand of the Southern for further reduction in import duties; Blakemore's intention to sue the Canal every Monday; the absence of news of the ship on which young Forman sailed.

W(illia)m Routh, London, to William Crawshay (II), Merthyr Tidvil, to explain the above viewpoint of recipient's father, which is based ...,

W(illia)m Routh, London, to William Crawshay (II), Merthyr Tidvil, to explain the above viewpoint of recipient's father, which is based on news of Hill's increase of furnaces and on the view that part-payment of Wages out of Poor Rates plus distribution of production costs over a large output enable iron to be sold at £4. 15s. 0d. per ton. Recipient is asked to go ahead with this policy or advance reasons against it. [Inscribed on Letter 679(a)].

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