James Eadie and Sons
of Clydesdale Tube Works, Rutherglen, Glasgow.
1874 31st December: "THE Company carrying on business at No. 34 London Street, Glasgow, at Clydesdale Tube Works, near Rutherglen, and at No. 169 Upper Thames Street, London, as Malleable Iron Tube Manufacturers, under the Firm of EADIE, MENZIES, & EADIE, and whereof the Subscribers were the sole Partners, has this day been DISSOLVED of mutual consent.
The Iron Boiler Tube Department of the above Business will, under the Firm of JAMES EADIE & SONS, continue to be carried on at Clydesdale Tube Works, Rutherglen, and at No. 169 Upper Thames Street, London, by the Subscribers James Eadie, James Eadie, Junior, and Andrew Eadie.
The Gas Tube Department of the same Business will, under the Firm of JAMES MENZIES & COMPANY, continue to be carried on by the Subscriber James Menzies, in the same portion of the Works as at present — such portion to be hereafter termed the Phoenix Tube Works; and also at No. 169 Upper Thames Street, London.
All debts due by the late concern of Eadie, Menzies, & Eadie will be paid, and all accounts due to it will be uplifted, by the Firm of James Eadie & Sons."[1]
1876 the Copartnery of JAMES EADIE & SONS, Iron Tube Makers, Glasgow, and its Individual Partners, ceased, on 30th June 1876, to be Partners of, or interested in, said CLYDESDALE IRON COMPANY, whereof they and the Subscribers Dougald M'Corkindale and Andrew Bain were the sole Partners. [2]
1912 became part of Scottish Tube Co