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Collection Reference Number GLC02437.03830
From Archive Folder The Henry Knox Papers [0083] January-March 1788 
Title James Swan to Henry Knox regarding business in France and the replacement of human labor with machines
Date 29 March 1788
Author Swan, James (1754-1831)  
Recipient Knox, Henry  
Document Type Correspondence; Business and financial document
Content Description Refers to his attempts to meet with merchants and manufacturers in France. Writes, "The reason why the French in this Quarter, have not been able to sell their manufrs. as low as the English, I saw in a moment,- there is not that invention & care used as in Great Britain, to save labour- People being plenty they continue to employ them, because they have done it for a long time." Discusses the replacement of human labor with machines in French manufacturing. Notes that the Marquis de Lafayette has offered to write Swan letters of introduction. Hopes his memorial on French and American trade, translated by M. de la Tombe, will be printed in France. Laments his financial situation.
Subjects Revolutionary War General  Merchants and Trade  Commerce  Industry  France  Global History and Civics  Finance  Letter of Introduction or Recommendation  Debt  Economics  
People Swan, James (1754-1831)  Knox, Henry (1750-1806)  Lafayette, Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, Marquis de (1757-1834)  
Place written Rouen, France
Theme Merchants & Commerce; Industry; Science, Technology, Invention; Foreign Affairs
Sub-collection The Henry Knox Papers
Additional Information In the late 1780s, oppressed with heavy debts, Colonel Swan went to Paris with letters of introduction to Lafayette and other prominent men and eventually worked his way into a partnership in the firm of Dallarde, Swan et Compagnie, one of the firms that furnished supplies to the new French government after the French Revolution. When a business partner filed suit against him in 1808, Swan chose to go to a high-class debtor's prison at St. Pelagie instead of settling the claim. He stayed there for 22 years and died in 1831, just one year after his release. Hepzibah had lived in the house in Dorchester until her death in 1825 (from the Dorchester Atheneum).
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859
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