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Title Letters from Francis Blackwell Forbes in Paris
Reference Ms. N-49, box 20
Library Massachusetts Historical Society
Collection Forbes Family Papers
Collection Series Francis Blackwell Forbes Letterbooks, 1869-1895
Date 1891-1892
Author / Creator Forbes, Francis Blackwell
Description Letters written on business matters (including the affairs of the Serrell Company and the failure of Russell and Company) to E W Serrell, Colonel Harrison Ritchie, Morel & Company in Lyon, W H Tottie, James G King & Sons, W Harwood, F D Hitch, Ewen Cameron of the Hong Kong Bank in London, Russell and Company, S W Pomeroy, Edward Luckemeyer, F O Ritz, Endicott Peabody, Cornelius Roosevelt, John Murray Forbes (1813-1898), the Chartered Bank of India, Australia, and China, and others.
Document Type Correspondence, Manuscript
Theme(s) Trade and Commerce
Keywords silk, cultivation, market, sale, business, syndicate, patent, committee, trustee, finance, profit, trade, banking
Countries UK; France; India; USA; Japan; Australia; China
Places Paris; London; Lyon
Ports Hong Kong, China
Company Russell and Company; Serrell Silk Reeling Company
Additional Information

Francis 'Frank' Blackwell Forbes (1839-1908) was the son of clergyman John Murray Forbes (1807-1885). He had a brother named John Murray Forbes, Jr (1844-1921) and a sister named Adelaide Forbes Carmichael. In 1857 Forbes went to China, where he became a partner in Russell and Company He was also active in the Shanghai Steam Navigation Company, which operated a fleet of flat-bottomed steamers up and down the Yangtze River. In 1867, he married Isabel Clarke, and they had four daughters (one of whom died young) and three sons: Francis Murray Forbes (1874-1961), who lived with cousin James Murray Forbes while he was in school and starting off in business; Charles Stewart Forbes (1877-1949); and James Grant Forbes (1878-1955).

While in the Far East, Francis Blackwell Forbes developed an interest in Chinese botany and became a leading specialist in the subject. He also took part in promoting what became the Shanghai Country Club, served as consul in Shanghai for Norway and Sweden, and wrote some papers on the Burlingame Mission. In the early 1880s, Forbes moved from China to Europe, spending most of the next 20 years in England and France. He became managing director of the Serrell Automatic Silk Reeling Company and was hit hard by the company's failure in 1894, as well as the earlier failure of Russell and Company in 1891. During the later years of his life, he became interested in bimetallism and corresponded widely with silverites in Europe and the United States.

Please note that some of the metadata for this document has been drawn from the Massachusetts Historical Society catalogue.

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