Difference between revisions of "MRP: Warehousing"

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23/01/12, CSG: Created page
 
23/01/12, CSG: Created page
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==Draft wiki article==
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Warehouses were located throughout the City of London in the mid-seventeenth century.  However, they were concentrated along the north and south shores of the River Thames, particularly in the parishes of XXXX, XXXX, and XXXX, and in the wards of XXXX, XXXX, XXXX.<ref>This is the footnote text</ref>
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John Strype's ''Survey of London'' provides some limited information on London warehousing and wharves in the later seventeenth century.<ref>This is the footnote text</ref>
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A map of the locations specified by the wills and posthumous inventories of wharfingers provides a more analytical complement to these descriptive data.
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- It may also be worth examining the locations specified by London, Middlesex and Surrey carmen and porters in surviving wills and inventories
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No warehouse buildings have physically survived from this period.  However, inspection of eighteenth and nineteenth century engravings, and early twentieth century photographs, gives some sense of their appearance.  For example, the London County Council ''Survey of London'' for Tower Street Ward contains interesting early photographs.<ref>This is the footnote text</ref>
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Some merchant inventories give information on storage and warehousing areas within combined residential and commercial properties in London.  For example, XXXX.<ref>This is the footnote text</ref>
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The English East India Company had a number of specialised warehouses at different locations:
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- The pepper warehouse<ref>This is the footnote text</ref>
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- The blue warehouse<ref>This is the footnote text</ref>
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- The Exchange warehouse<ref>This is the footnote text</ref>
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==Suggested links==
 
==Suggested links==
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==Notes==
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===EEIC warehouses===
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"[1677-1679]...Aston, Keeper of the Pepper Warehouse, 80/. ; David Aston, assistant, 30/. ; Thomas Spriggs, Husband, 200/. ; Francis Thomson, assistant, 100/. ; George Papillon, Keeper of the Blue Warehouse, 160/. ; and for setting up the candle, 10/. ; Thomas Lewis, Paymaster of the Mariners, 30/. ; William Moses, Solicitor, 20/. ; Captain John Prowd, Surveyor, 80/. ; Robert Johnson, Doorkeeper, 40/. ; Michael Prescot, Surveyor of ..."<ref>Ethel Bruce Sainsbury (ed.), ''A Calendar of the Court Minutes of the East India Company, 1677-1679'' (Oxford, 1938), p. 177</ref>
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==Possible primary sources==
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==Possible secondary sources==

Revision as of 13:00, February 2, 2012

Warehousing

Editorial history

23/01/12, CSG: Created page



Draft wiki article


Warehouses were located throughout the City of London in the mid-seventeenth century. However, they were concentrated along the north and south shores of the River Thames, particularly in the parishes of XXXX, XXXX, and XXXX, and in the wards of XXXX, XXXX, XXXX.[1]

John Strype's Survey of London provides some limited information on London warehousing and wharves in the later seventeenth century.[2]

A map of the locations specified by the wills and posthumous inventories of wharfingers provides a more analytical complement to these descriptive data.

- It may also be worth examining the locations specified by London, Middlesex and Surrey carmen and porters in surviving wills and inventories

No warehouse buildings have physically survived from this period. However, inspection of eighteenth and nineteenth century engravings, and early twentieth century photographs, gives some sense of their appearance. For example, the London County Council Survey of London for Tower Street Ward contains interesting early photographs.[3]

Some merchant inventories give information on storage and warehousing areas within combined residential and commercial properties in London. For example, XXXX.[4]

The English East India Company had a number of specialised warehouses at different locations:

- The pepper warehouse[5]
- The blue warehouse[6]
- The Exchange warehouse[7]



Suggested links


See Trade
See Research themes



To do




Notes

EEIC warehouses


"[1677-1679]...Aston, Keeper of the Pepper Warehouse, 80/. ; David Aston, assistant, 30/. ; Thomas Spriggs, Husband, 200/. ; Francis Thomson, assistant, 100/. ; George Papillon, Keeper of the Blue Warehouse, 160/. ; and for setting up the candle, 10/. ; Thomas Lewis, Paymaster of the Mariners, 30/. ; William Moses, Solicitor, 20/. ; Captain John Prowd, Surveyor, 80/. ; Robert Johnson, Doorkeeper, 40/. ; Michael Prescot, Surveyor of ..."[8]



Possible primary sources




Possible secondary sources

  1. This is the footnote text
  2. This is the footnote text
  3. This is the footnote text
  4. This is the footnote text
  5. This is the footnote text
  6. This is the footnote text
  7. This is the footnote text
  8. Ethel Bruce Sainsbury (ed.), A Calendar of the Court Minutes of the East India Company, 1677-1679 (Oxford, 1938), p. 177