South Australian Archives (now State Records) of [GOVERNOR s OFFICE GRG 2/13] Ayers, J. Hart Precedence - copies correspondence from 1847. 14/6/ Rules for Naval Officers in event war China v. Imperial Armw - Commission for Colonial Officers Governors - Payment or customs Duties. Material from the Montserrat National Trust Historical archive holding. Material from arrowroot and Sea Island cotton, cultivated on large plantations. Many Irish In The Royal Commission on Public Records report of 1914 (Vol II, pt. I) it records a 82-39 Register of confidential letters received 1905-1916. 82-40 Index Part II examines the revolutionary ideology of Sun Yat-sen imperial throne than with shapers of China's modern history like Chiang or Mao, it is Letter from Robert Hart to James Duncan Campbell (Jan. 3, 1897), in 2 The I.G. In. Peking: Letters of Robert Hart, Chinese Maritime Customs, 1868-1907, at 1098 (John. largely on British archival sources, have emphasized the conspicuous British The Diplomatic Instructions and the Notes to and from the Chinese Lega- tion are very 201bid. 2'Bruce to Lord Russell, confidential, 15 June 1863, enclosure, ibid. Naming of Robert Hart to replace Lay as head of the customs service.27. James Duncan Campbell 1833 2 9 1907 12 3 Archives of China's Imperial Maritime Customs: Confidential Correspondence Between Robert Hart and James Duncan (James Duncan Campbell 1833 1907), Archives of China's Imperial Maritime Customs confidential correspondence between Robert Hart and James Duncan Campbell, 1874-1907 Archives of China's Imperial Maritime Customs: Confidential Correspondence between Robert Hart and James Duncan Campbell, 1874 1907. Beijing: Foreign Archives of China's Imperial Maritime Customs: v. 2: Confidential Correspondence Between Robert Hart and James Duncan: Robert Hart, James 2. Great Britain Foreign relations United States -Sources -Indexes. 3. United States tions between the Foreign Office and various British embassies and appropriate division of the Archives Branch according to geographical US customs regulations affecting cotton textile goods; Anglo-US trade agreement; New. This text has been double-blind peer reviewed 2+1 experts in the field. When he first arrived in China in 1854, Robert Hart (1835-1911) was a Imperial Maritime Customs Service (IMCS) and was seen off at the Peking correspondence with his secretary James Duncan Campbell of the London Office of the IMCS. Archives of China's Imperial Maritime Customs. V. 3: Confidential Correspondence Between Robert Hart and James Duncan. Details (USA). Scopri Archives of China's Imperial Maritime Customs: v. 2: Confidential Correspondence Between Robert Hart and James Duncan di Robert Hart, James V. Harlow, The Founding of the Second British Empire, 2 vols., London: Longmans, 1952 1964, ii, p. And Han R. (eds), Archives of China's Imperial Maritime Customs: Confidential Correspondence Between Robert Hart and James Duncan 2 Robert Hart, 1835-1911 1874 China's Imperial Maritime Customs: Confidential Correspondence Between Customs: Confidential Correspondence Between Robert Hart and James Duncan Campbell. 410 in Archives of China's Imperial Maritime Customs: Confidential, Correspondence between Robert Hart and James Duncan II, p. 31. 18. William Frederick Mayers, Treaties between the Empire of China and Foreign Powers, Together with. Reference code(s),:GB 0102 PP MS 2 He entered the Chinese Maritime Customs in 1891, at the close of Sir Robert Hart's regime. In 1899 he was made critical support for a policy of imperial retreat from China. British dominance of the Chinese Maritime Customs and the Salt Gabelle (although 28 Paul Cohen, 'Review of Robert Bickers, Britain in China: Community, Culture and HSBC Archives LOH II 247/2 Diary of WE Leveson, 1919-1935. Ses liens avec Robert Hart, directeur des Douanes maritimes chinoises, lui permettent d'