Thomas Nash (London)
Calico printer, on London
To Callico Printers, Whitsters, and Others.
To be Sold by Auction, by Mr. RILEY, by Order of the Executors, on the Premises, Mr. Morris's Causeway, on the Bank of the Thames, opposite Somerset House, on Monday the 21st of October, and the following Days, at Eleven o'Clock,
The valuable and extensive Callico-Printing Plant and Implements of THOMAS NASH, Esq; deceased, consisting of large Coppers, 10 Iron Pans, 3 Wax Melting Kettles, 2 ditto Printing Pans, a large Reservoir 56 Feet in Length, capital forcing Engine, with Cranks, five Pair of Stocks, three Pair of Squeezers, two Indigo Mills, five Vitriol, Pot Ash, Clay, Paste, and Colour Mills, an excellent Callender with Iron Cylinders, a new Packing Press, a Spindle, driving Engine, and sundry other Mill Work, four excellent Copper-plate Presses with Iron Rollers, two Cockles, two Copper Pumps, a large Crane and Tackle, and several Tons of iron, Lead, and Brass Work, 70 Printing, Penciling, and other Tables, two drying Stoves, all the Stock and Apparatus of the Block-maker's, Millwright's, and Carpenter's Workshops, with a large Quantity seasoned Oak, Elm, Fir, Holly, and other Timber and Deals, a six Inch shod-wheel Cart, two tilted Linen Carts, a Fire Engine, Scales and Weights, 52 Butts of Iron Liquor, 12 Casks Copperas, a Quantity of Log and Campeachy Wood, Shumack, French Indigo, Vitriol, some Oil Colours and Drugs, 100 Tons Purbeck Paving, several Thousands of Bricks, Fire-Wood, and numerous other Articles. Also his Capital Collection of upwards of 15,000 Wood Prints, 400 Metal Wax Prints, and a few Copper plates, all of which are in perfect Preservation, some of them are much esteemed Patterns, and exceedingly well adapted for the general Course of foreign and internal Trade. To be viewed six Days previous to the Sale. Catalogues to be then had of the Printer of this Paper, and Mr. Riley, Long Acre, London.'[1]
See Also
Sources of Information
- ↑ Manchester Mercury - Tuesday 10 September 1782