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La Forte collection

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: 4711

COLLECTION DESCRIPTION

The La Forte Collection contains correspondence, instructional material, technical drawings, financial records and other official documents drawn from the archives of Benoist La Forte, commissaire and then Inspector General for the French Ministry of Gunpowder. The more than 3,000 items in the collection span the period from 1784 to 1797, thus documenting the entirety of La Forte's training and administrative career with the Régie des poudres et salpêtres. There is a small number of printed items, and a good portion of the incoming correspondence appears on paper with French Revolution letterhead. The contents of the collection are arranged into three broad categories: general documents and manuscripts dating from 1784 to 1797; correspondence from 1786 to 1793; and correspondence from 1793 to 1797. There is in addition some earlier correspondence from previous occupants of La Forte's positions. Most of the pieces in the collection date from 1793-1797, a period of rapid reform and expansion in French gunpowder manufacture during which La Forte was Inspector for Vaucluse. Well-known figures whose names appear in the collection include Antoine François de Fourcroy, and noted chemists Antoine Laurent Lavoisier and Jean Antoine Claude Chaptal de Chanteloup.

Among the more general material there are documents concerning La Forte, such as his letters of appointment, commissions, etc.; a chemistry textbook from 1785 and notes -- from La Forte's years as a student and beyond -- on various aspects of the science and technology of gunpowder manufacture; and a set of instructions, disseminated throughout France, for Inspectors of gunpowder and saltpetre, probably composed by Lavoisier and addressing every aspect of the manufacturing process.

A detailed record of La Forte's administration is provided by summaries of its operations submitted annually to the Régie for the years 1787 to 1797. These reports gather together correspondence to and from the Régie, financial records, inventories, estimates for new construction, etc. Complementing this archive is a series of annual accounts, many signed by Lavoisier, and receipts from the Régie.

Chief correspondents include the Régie des poudres et salpêtres at the central office in Paris, headed by Lavoisier and four other régisseurs (the Régie became l'Agence des poudres et salpêtres in 1794); the Comité de Salut Public, for a time the chief executive organ of the revolutionary government; the Representants du Peuple, who were members of the National Assembly; government agents; government-appointed instructors who were often the leading chemists of France; local administrators, writing from all parts of France; and the salt and saltpetre workers (saliniers and salpêtriers) representing the lowest ranks of the gunpowder industry. Many of these functionaries were expedient, transiently powerful creations of the revolutionary government, concerned with shoring up support for the new republic, and enforcing the observation of revolutionary legislation during a time of war.

Topics covered include: methods of gunpowder manufacture; technological improvements and administrative reform; results of production; stimulating production; accounts; problems procuring raw materials (especially saltpetre and combustibles) and equipment; fixing the price of saltpetre; the construction of factories, refineries and workshops; abuses, such as the clandestine production and private sale of saltpetre; accidents; the effect of the Revolution on industry (including revolutionary surveillance and opposition to revolutionary legislation); Parisian politics; the French economy; the shift to paper currency; workers' salaries; and dissatisfaction among the workers.

Correspondence from the workers themselves, of which there is a substantial amount, provides information about local administration, conditions in the workshops, the effects of inflation on workers and production, and the various technical and logistical problems encountered from day to day.

Jean V. Callahan January 22, 1996

(Compiled with the aid of French Books and Manuscripts: 1700-1830, An Exhibition and Description of Collections in Cornell University Library honoring Arthur H. and Mary Marden Dean. Ithaca: Cornell University Library, 1981.)

The guide to the La Forte Collection was produced with funding provided by the United States Department of Education grant Title II-C, "Strengthening Research Library Resources"; The French Revolution Collections at Cornell University: a Retrospective Conversion and Preservation Project.

Dates

  • 1784-1797.

Creator

Language of Materials

Collection material in French.

BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

Benoist La Forte was a government administrator in France's newly nationalized gunpowder industry during the period of the Revolution. Born in Grenoble in 1761, he gave up practicing law in 1784 in order to study the manufacture of gunpowder under the Commission of gunpowder (Régie des poudres et salpêtres), the governmental body which had supplanted the private monopoly in 1775. Beginning in 1786 La Forte held a series of government posts: he served briefly as comptroller for the département of Montpellier, and then as commissaire at Clermont-Ferrand, a post he held through July 1787. In August of that year he was named commissaire des poudres et salpêtres for La Rochelle, remaining there until November 1793, when the Régie des poudres and the Comité de Salut Public appointed him Inspector and then, in An III, Inspector General for Vaucluse and neighboring départements. La Forte's promotion to Inspector occurred around the same time that the Régie, renamed l'Agence des poudres et salpêtres, was undergoing substantial reforms in order to meet the demands of the Revolution and the European war. On December 4, 1793, the National Convention, on the recommendation of the Comité de Salut Public, inaugurated a program of highly regulated de-centralization which required all Frenchmen to participate in the production of gunpowder according to fixed guidelines. The recently-annexed territory that became the département of Vaucluse in 1793, rich in saltpetre and furnished with several functional powder mills, promised to be an especially exploitable area of France, and La Forte, apparently a valued administrator, was named inspector for Vaucluse and given wide-ranging powers, which increased in the following year. La Forte remained Inspector General until May 1797 when, despite the protests of his superiors, he resigned his post.

Extent

6.2 cubic feet. (6.2 cubic feet.)

Abstract

Letters, receipts, and other documents addressed to or received from officials in the Régie des poudres et salpêtres in Paris and the departments and districts of France, and saltpeter manufacturers, chiefly relating to gunpowder production. Other topics covered include Parisian politics, the state of the French economy, the shift to paper currency, and dissatisfaction among the workers.

COLLECTION ARRANGEMENT

The bookseller's description of the collection (available at the Reference Desk), written in French and replete with representative extracts from documents and correspondence, forms the core of the guide. The bookseller's description treats the material as falling into three broad series: general manuscripts and documents dating from the whole of La Forte's career; correspondence from 1786 to 1793; and correspondence from An II (1793/1794) to An V (1796/1797). The two correspondence series are further divided into groups, usually according to the type of correspondent (eg, correspondence from instructors, from the Comité de Salut Public, etc.), and less frequently according to the particular issue or project they address (eg, the construction of a powder mill).

SERIES LIST

Series I. General Manuscripts and Documents
Boxes 1, 3, 6, 7, 9, 10
Series II. Correspondence from 1786 to 1793
Box 1
Series III. Correspondence from <emph render="italic">An</emph> II (1793/1794) to <emph render="italic">An</emph> V (1796/1797)
Boxes 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
Series IV. Miscellaneous Documents
Boxes 4, 6

OTHER GUIDES TO THE COLLECTION

The bookseller's description of the collection, which forms the core of this guide, is available at the Reference Desk. Please contact ref@cornell.edu

PROVENANCE

The La Forte Collection was purchased from the bookseller Lucien Scheler of Paris in 1967 with the help of a donation by Arthur Dean.

RELATED MATERIAL

The La Forte Collection acquires added interest from its relationship to the Lavoisier Collection and Lavoisier Manuscripts Collection in the History of Science Collections. Lavoisier's connection to the salpetre industry is described briefly by Denis I. Duveen and H.S. Klickstein in their A Bibliography of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, London, 1954, pp. 219-231. Other related materials at Cornell are held in the French Revolution Collection, Ben Grauer Collection, Maurepas Collection, Lafayette Collection, and the general collection in the Division of Rare and Manuscript Collection.

Physical Description

Letters, receipts, other documents.

General

Contact Information:
Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections 2B Carl A. Kroch Library Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853 (607) 255-3530 Fax: (607) 255-9524 rareref@cornell.edu http://rmc.library.cornell.edu
Compiled by:
Jean V. Callahan, Phil McCray
Date completed:
January 1996
EAD encoding:
Mireille Lee, July 2000
Status
Completed
Author
Compiled by Jean V. Callahan, Phil McCray
Date
July 2000
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
ENG

Repository Details

Part of the Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections Repository

Contact:
2B Carl A. Kroch Library
Cornell University
Ithaca NY 14853
607-255-3530
607-255-9524 (Fax)