This enterprise was listed in 1816 as a maker of fancy pen and sportsman’s knives in Eyre Lane. By the early 1820s, it was classed as a merchant, selling pocket cutlery and razors. The partners were George Robinson; Thomas Lamb; and George Arundel (who lived in Rockingham Street and then South Street). Thomas Lamb, Howard Street, died on 4 January 1824, aged 45. The firm became Robinson & Arundel, cutler ‘to his Majesty George IV’. In 1825, Robinson retired. By 1828, George Arundel partnered Joseph Mappin in Arundel & Mappin (late Robinson, Lamb & Arundel), based in Eyre Lane. In the mid-1830s, Arundel retired through ill-health. He died on 4 June 1839, aged 54, after a ‘long illness induced by paralysis’. His obituary described him as the ‘last surviving partner of the extensive cutlery concern of Robinson, Lamb & Arundel’, who was ‘esteemed … for his uprightness and integrity’ (Sheffield Local Register). His gravestone is at All Saints, Ecclesall.