fbpx
Wikipedia

Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet

Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet (18 April 1740 – 11 September 1810) was an English merchant banker, a member of the Baring family, later becoming the first of the Baring baronets.

Sir Francis Baring

Sir Francis Baring, in a painting by Sir Thomas Lawrence
Born(1740-04-18)18 April 1740
Died11 September 1810(1810-09-11) (aged 70)
OccupationBanker
Spouse
Harriet Herring
(m. 1767⁠–⁠1804)

Early life edit

He was born at Larkbeare House[1] near Exeter, son of Johann Baring (1697–1748), a German cloth merchant who had settled in England, by his English wife Elizabeth Vowler (1702–1766), daughter of a prosperous Exeter dry goods wholesaler (at that time called a grocer).

Baring's father emigrated from Bremen, Germany, in 1717 and settled at Exeter, where he became a leading wool manufacturer and textile merchant. His premature death in 1748 resulted in Francis, aged eight, being brought up and strongly influenced by his mother, Elizabeth. Her sound business head nearly doubled the family's worth by the time of her death in 1766.

In the early 1750s, Francis was sent to London for education at Mr Fargue's French school at Hoxton and then at Mr Fuller's academy in Lothbury. Samuel Touchet, one of the leading Manchester and West Indian merchants in London, accepted him in 1755 for a seven-year apprenticeship, charging his mother £800. Upon his release on Christmas Day 1762, he joined his two surviving brothers in the interlocking partnerships of John and Francis Baring & Co. of London and John and Charles Baring & Co. of Exeter. Francis led the London concern and Charles the Exeter one, while John, a leading Exeter citizen and a Member of Parliament from 1776, was mainly a silent partner, although nominally senior partner of both firms.

By 1807 the brothers had evolved the business into Baring Brothers & Co. Despite being partially deaf from an early age, Francis did very well and, by the mid-1790s, had the full confidence of the British Parliament.[2]

John and Francis Baring Company edit

Initially, the London business comprised the accounts and goodwill transferred to it from an old family friend, Nathaniel Paice, a London merchant who was retiring, but also much business came from John and Charles Baring & Co. and other Exeter merchants who required a London agent. Agency services for overseas merchants and trading speculations were soon added. But the firm lost money in eight of its first fourteen years, as Francis Baring learned how to judge markets; having started out with £10,000 he reckoned that by 1777 his net worth stood at just £2,500.

Notwithstanding these private reverses, the City of London quickly recognized Baring's special qualities and in 1771 the Royal Exchange Assurance, a giant public business, appointed him to its court. He underpinned his directorship, which continued until 1780, with a holding of £820 in the company's stock, no mean sum when his assets totalled £13,000. This appointment was important to hold; for the first time he was marked out from the throng of merchants populating the courts and alleys of the city.

Independence from Exeter edit

Baring's early business was constrained through the demands placed upon it by the much larger Exeter firm, which suffered under Charles Baring's speculations of a "wild, strange, incoherent description".[3] The resulting conflict was only resolved in early 1777, when Baring took the initiative in dissolving the interlocking partnerships. Capital and management were now entirely separate, though Francis maintained strong family links with Exeter. Regularly he employed his wealth to rescue Charles from ruin and thus preserve the good name of his family; his motivation was an intense desire to see business and family prosper. Thus he was scandalized by Charles's "almost monstrous management of the original and chief dependence of the Baring family".[4]

Baring's brother John remained a sleeping partner until his retirement in late 1800. In 1781 two nominal partners were appointed, J. F. Mesturas, formerly a clerk, and Charles Wall, who in September 1790 married Baring's eldest daughter, Harriet Wall.[5] The two nominees were soon afterwards promoted full partners. However, Mesturas withdrew in 1795 and was not replaced. From 1777 until his retirement in 1804, Baring led the firm almost singlehandedly, for many years having Wall (died 1815) as his sole active partner.

Financial success edit

The partnership capital grew steadily from £20,000 in 1777 to £70,000 in 1790. The next decade was to prove very profitable, thanks to the fall of Amsterdam and the rise of London as centre of shipping trade, thanks to the French wartime bans on shipping in Amsterdam. Partnership capital peaked at £400,000 in 1804. Baring contributed the major share, providing 12% in 1777, 40% in 1790, and 54% in 1804.

Annual profits rose to £40,000 in the 1790s and peaked, atypically, at over £200,000 in 1802; they were calculated after payment to partners at 4% interest, sometimes 5%, on their capital. Baring's share of the profits increased steadily from a quarter in the mid-1760s to a half from 1777 and to three-quarters from 1801. His total wealth, business as well as private, rose accordingly, from almost £5,000 in 1763, to £64,000 in 1790, and to £500,000 in 1804.

Network edit

Early on Baring's business profits were derived mostly from international trade, especially between Britain, the western European coast, the Iberian peninsula, Italy, the West Indies, and, from the 1770s, North America. They arose from trading on sole account or, more often, on joint account with other merchants; from acting as London agent for overseas merchants, buying and selling consignments, making and collecting payments, and arranging shipping and warehousing; and, in due course, from trade finance through making advances or, more frequently, accepting bills of exchange.

In the West Indies, Baring had major financial interests in sugar and slavery.[6] It is said he made his fortune from the slave trade while only 16 years old.[7] With the income he generated from these ventures, Baring bought Manor House in 1796.[8]

The success of this work was greatly influenced by the establishment of a powerful network of corresponding houses in the main international trading centres. These alliances with leading European and North American merchants were the keys to his success.

Hope & Co. of Amsterdam, the most powerful merchant bank in Europe's leading financial centre, was Baring's most valuable connection. Their association is said to have begun in the 1760s, when Henry Hope passed Baring some bills to negotiate and ended up "exceedingly struck with the transaction which bespoke not only great zeal and activity, but what was still more important ... either good credit or great resources ... From that day Baring became one of their principal friends".[9] The link was consolidated in other ways, in particular through the marriage in 1796 of Pierre César Labouchère [see under Hope family], a leading figure at Hopes, to Baring's third daughter, Dorothy.

Vital connections were also established on the other side of the Atlantic. Baring was quicker than most to see the commercial potential of Britain's North American colonies, and his finance house quickly emerged as the European hub of a network of North America's most powerful merchants. In 1774 his first American customer was the leading Philadelphia merchant, Willing, Morris & Co.; its influential partners included Robert Morris, a future financial architect of American independence from Britain, and Thomas Willing, a future president of the Bank of the United States. Through them Baring was introduced to Senator William Bingham, one of America's wealthiest men, a connection which gave rise to several lucrative transactions.

Government adviser edit

Baring's work from 1782 as an adviser on commercial matters to cabinet ministers propelled him from relative obscurity to the inner circles of British political life, underlining how his influence had grown. The catalyst for this advancement was his Devon connections. His brother John was elected to parliament as a member for Exeter in 1776; more importantly, in 1780 his sister, Elizabeth, married another MP and fellow Devonian, John Dunning.

A rich and influential lawyer, Dunning was allied to Lord Shelburne, a powerful Whig politician who held progressive views on political economy and whose borough of Calne Dunning represented in Parliament. In July 1782, following Shelburne's promotion to Prime Minister and Dunning's appointment as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Baring fulfilled the new Prime Minister's need "to have recourse from time to time to mercantile advice".[10] Baring, by instinct a Whig, became Shelburne's confidential adviser on commerce, or his "handy City man", according to a discontented William Cobbett. Baring's ideas on political economy and commerce were well ahead of his time; in 1799 he defended the Bank of England's decision (in 1797) to suspend specie payments as both correct and inevitable, in the face of hostile opposition from many of his peers.

Baring's knowledge of North American merchants and trade made him especially useful in the closing years of the American War of Independence when Shelburne, anxious for a liberal settlement, invited his comments on commercial aspects of the proposed peace treaty with the United States. Shelburne introduced Baring to Isaac Barré, his paymaster-general, and to such leading luminaries as William Pitt the Younger, Henry Dundas, Jeremy Bentham, Edmund Burke, Sir Samuel Romilly, and Lords Erskine, Camden and Sydney. However, Baring's friendship with Lord Lansdowne (as Shelburne became in 1784), Dunning, and Barré ran particularly deep, and in 1787 he drew public attention to it by commissioning their triple portrait from Sir Joshua Reynolds. A private financial connection also existed. For six years from 1783 Baring loaned Lansdowne £5,000, on security of a debt owing to Lansdowne. In 1805, on Lansdowne's death, Baring became a trustee of his estate, charged with the task of liquidating debts of £90,000.

Baring was not nearly as close to the Tory leader William Pitt, who followed Lansdowne as Prime Minister and who held office almost continuously until Baring's retirement from active business. Their views were far apart, and on Pitt's death Baring was quick to stress their lack of concurrence "on any great political question for above 20 years, our political opinions and principles being different".[11] In particular he disagreed with Pitt's policy for the seemingly endless continuation of a wasteful war; they also suffered differences over government policy towards the East India Company. Baring's personal influence in government waned but his expert advice, always fairly delivered, continued to be provided on such matters as trade with Turkey, the importance of Gibraltar, and the funding of the national debt. As part of Pitt's cleansing of abuse from public office, in 1784 he appointed Baring a commissioner charged with investigating fees, gratuities, and prerequisites for holding certain offices.

The link with Lansdowne led Baring to the Commons in 1784 when, at a cost of £3,000, he was elected MP for Grampound, Cornwall. He was ousted six years later, after which he stood unsuccessfully for Ilchester. Later he sat for Lansdowne's safe boroughs of Chipping Wycombe, Buckinghamshire (1794–6 and 1802–6), and Calne, Wiltshire (1796–1802), which had formerly been represented by other Lansdowne favourites, Dunning and Barré. Notwithstanding his admission that "my voice is so very unequal to the House of Commons",[12] his speeches were reckoned to be "neat, flowing and perspicuous, aiming more by solidity of argument to arrest and convince his hearers, than by beautiful figures and impassioned eloquence to mislead the minds of men".[13]

Both in private and from the benches, Baring advocated greater freedom of trade. "Every regulation", he said, "is a restriction, and as such contrary to that freedom which I have held to be the first principle of the well being of commerce", for good measure adding that a restriction, or regulation, may doubtless answer the particular purpose for which it is imposed, but as commerce is not a simple thing, but a thing of a thousand relations, what may be of profit in the particular, may be ruinous in general.[14]

Government business in the 1780s edit

There can be little doubt that Baring's firm benefited directly as well as indirectly from his political connections, in particular from Barré's almost limitless patronage as paymaster-general during the American War of Independence. In 1782 he advised Lansdowne that in 1781 and 1782 contractors' profits from supplying the army abroad represented over 13% of the total value of transactions. Baring won the 1783 contract on the basis of 1% commission, and, when war ended and the contract was terminated prematurely, he won contracts for the disposal of stores. Government savings were at least 10% and Baring was personally rewarded in other ways. Between 1784 and 1786 he (and not his firm) received £7,000 in commissions for undertaking government work and a further £4,250 from interest on government money in his hands. Against this, in his private accounts he charged the £3,000 expenses incurred in winning his Commons seat in 1784. Nevertheless, transactions for the government stretched his resources in these years. He apparently "borrowed" stock from Martin & Co., his brother-in-law's firm, "to enable me to negotiate the government business".[15] Yet the returns on these risky adventures were clearly immense. During the war, when government expenditure soared, his firm also emerged as a contractor for marketing British government debt; it was believed to have made profits of £19,000.

The East India Company edit

Francis Baring's other distraction from his firm was his directorship of the East India Company from 1779.[16] By 1783 he led the City interest on the company's court, and in 1786 he was reckoned its most able member. His commitment was significant; he gave up each Wednesday and occasionally a Friday to its affairs. Notwithstanding his views on the liberalization of American trade, he promoted the company's monopoly and commercial independence "with an ardour contrary to the usual moderation of his character"[17] He joined the East India Company when the British government was anxious to exert greater political control over it, recognizing the great territorial power that it had become. Baring actively fought off the far-reaching proposals of Lord North and Charles James Fox, believing that "India is not a colony and God forbid that it ever should be",[18] but he worked with an old friend from the period of his apprenticeship and now a fellow director, Richard Atkinson, to modify and facilitate the acceptance of Pitt's India Act. In 1792 and 1793, as Pitt's preferred candidate, he was elected chairman and charged with the task of renegotiating the company's charter.[19]

The experience of his chairmanship was both exhausting and distracting. His private accounts went unwritten for two years and in 1792, "being obliged to travel for my health".[15] he was utterly unprepared for the collapse in prices of British government securities which reduced his private capital of £20,000 by half. "The more I work", he confided to Lansdowne, "the greater the degree of jealousy and difficulty I have to encounter amongst the directors who are in general composed of either knaves or fools".[20] Pitt rewarded Baring with a baronetcy on 29 May 1793,[21][16] and he soldiered on as a director until his death in 1810, but increasingly he was disillusioned and absent from the court. As early as 1798 he had lost "much of that consequence ... which his superior knowledge, experience and abilities entitle him to".[22]

Transactions with Hope & Co. edit

Throughout Baring's lifetime his good commercial intelligence, sound judgement, nimble-footedness, and instinct for speculative profit remained the hallmarks of his business style. Thousands of speculations detailed in his firm's ledgers attest to this, but his burgeoning business and rising confidence were graphically illustrated in 1787 when Hope & Co. introduced him to speculation on a grand scale. The two houses set about controlling the entire European cochineal market by secretly buying up all available stocks, one quarter for Barings and the rest for Hopes. Correspondents from Saint Petersburg to Cadiz spent £450,000 but prices remained static and in 1788, with a huge loss anticipated, the partners of Barings agreed "to forgo any participation of the profits of the trade for the last year".[15]

The resumption of war in 1793 provided new challenges and opportunities. The evacuation of Hopes to London between 1795 and 1803, when Amsterdam was occupied by France, and the availability of their expertise, contacts, and capital to Barings were of immense assistance. The two houses embarked on bold transactions—invariably with a quarter for Barings and the rest for Hopes. Their first adventure was entirely private and aimed to secure a substantial part of their capital from the dangers of European revolutions and wars. In late 1795 Baring dispatched his 22-year-old son, Alexander, to Boston to negotiate and execute the purchase of more than 1 million acres (4,000 km2) of land in Maine for £107,000. The investment was introduced by the land's owner, Senator William Bingham, son-in-law of Barings' Philadelphia correspondent, Thomas Willing, and yet another friend of Lansdowne. Francis Baring undertook the initial appraisal and commitment to the investment, and the negotiations were left to his son Alexander, who afterwards remained in North America as Barings' representative and who consolidated his position by marrying Bingham's eldest daughter, Ann Louisa. The link was further strengthened through the marriage of Baring's third son, Henry, to Bingham's other daughter, Maria, in 1802. Both marriages brought considerable wealth to the Baring family.

Wartime finance edit

British government expenditure, which grew to unprecedented levels during the European wars, created great opportunities for London merchant bankers such as Sir Francis Baring. After 1799 his firm headed the list of public debt contractors in twelve of the next fifteen years, supposedly giving rise to total profits of £190,000. For Baring, a key financier of the nation's war effort, it represented the pinnacle of his power and standing. Despite his retirement in 1804, he continued to appear as a contractor until his death because, as he explained, "it was thought my name would be useful in the opinion of the publick".[23]

Britain's European allies needed funds and came to Baring who, with Hopes, now organized some of the first marketings of foreign bonds in London. Believing fervently that "it may be desirable not to have the subject to discuss with our own Ministers, as you know very well how ignorant they are of foreign finance",[24] in 1801 he dispatched his son-in-law P. C. Labouchere of Hopes and his son George to negotiate a loan to the court of Lisbon. The resulting "Portuguese diamond loan" of 13 million guilders was shared between Barings and Hopes on the usual 25:75 basis.

Of equal strategic importance was Baring's transmission of British government subsidies to allied governments to support their war efforts. This highly secret and sensitive work required expert knowledge of money transmission and a sound correspondent network; again it underlined the government's confidence in Baring. Opportunities for direct financing of the enemy were also presented to Baring, who knew he could hoodwink the government into consenting to them; "but to have obtained that licence we must have presented a memorial so equivocal and in truth so unfounded that it would not suit us and therefore was abandoned".[25]

Baring applied a looser criterion in his choice of trading partners, however. Links with leading American merchants, such as the Codmans of Boston, Willing and Francis of Philadelphia, Robert Gilmour, and Robert Oliver & Brothers of Baltimore were now immensely important to Barings' business as its axis swung from continental European to transatlantic trade. In sustaining these extensive connections Baring undoubtedly facilitated, albeit passively, the breaching of Britain's continental blockade.

American finance edit

Close connections with American merchants inevitably resulted in links with the United States government. Since the close of the American War of Independence, Baring had kept watch over the American government's finances in Europe. However, his first significant transaction for its account was the sale in 1795 of $800,000 worth of stock and the remittance of the proceeds in support of American negotiations with the north African Barbary powers. To secure the transaction Francis Baring admitted to acting with "zeal, perhaps imprudence, in going beyond the letters of my orders",[26] but the American ambassador in London commended his "liberal and skilful manner", and undertook to ensure that the government would "entertain a proper sense of your Service in this Business".[27] Other business soon followed, including the sale of the government's shares in the Bank of the United States and the purchase of munitions from British manufactures for the government's account.

Barings was considered to be an "English house of the first reputation and solidity".[28] After the failure of Bird, Savage & Bird in 1803 Barings was appointed to replace them as London financial agent for the United States government, leaving Sir Francis Baring's influence in North American financial affairs unrivalled in London.[29] At about this time, when a short interval of peace existed after the treaty of Amiens, Baring led his house, alongside Hopes, into its largest and most prestigious transaction yet, financing the Louisiana Purchase. The French government wanted to sell 1,000,000 square miles (2,600,000 km2) of the Territory of Louisiana, and the United States administration wanted to buy it; the purchase price was $15 million and Francis Baring was charged with finding it. He sent his son Alexander to Paris to negotiate with French and American representatives, and the eventual result was that on behalf of the French government Barings and Hopes sold US government bonds worth $11.25 million. The business was of enormous size; "my nerves are equal to the operation", Francis Baring reassured Hopes, but he added that "we all tremble about the magnitude of the American account".[30] Later he confessed that "what I suffered can never be described and it completely overpowered my nerves for the first and I hope last time".[30]

The leading American house in London also acted as London banker for the Bank of the United States. Here again the close network of correspondents and friends which Baring so earnestly cultivated was vital. Thomas Willing, William Bingham's father-in-law and Barings' client at Philadelphia since 1774, was the bank's president and so its use of Baring's firm in making London payments, undertaking exchange transactions, and providing credits was seemingly inevitable.

Withdrawal from business edit

Baring aimed to strengthen his links with Hopes even further, through his son joining their partnership, but Alexander Baring could not be persuaded to comply. Baring's ultimate goal was to establish a house under his control based on both Barings and Hopes, which would straddle the North Sea, dominate government finance in Europe, and provide an enormously powerful base for its American connections. Alexander's reluctance compelled him "to abandon the colossal plan of one foot in England, the other in Holland".[31] It was "a sacrifice such as no head of a family ever made before", he confided to Lansdowne, "but I must confess there is enough left for consolation".[31]

In 1803 Baring began his withdrawal from business when he gave up his entitlement to a share of his firm's profits. Much of his capital remained on loan; by the time of his death in 1810 he still provided £70,000 or about 17% of the firm's resources. He stood down as partner in 1804, handing the reins to Charles Wall, the "principal manager" according to Farrington, and his three eldest sons, Thomas, Alexander, and Henry. In recognition of their assumption of leadership, in 1807 the nameplate of Francis Baring & Co. was taken down and replaced by that of Baring Brothers & Co.

Private wealth edit

Baring's accumulation of great wealth allowed him to diversify his pursuits in gentlemanly living. In 1790 he began to acquire property at Beddington in Surrey, based around Camden House, and in 1796 he bought Manor House, Lee, a relatively modest country house about six miles (10 km) south-east of central London, from his old friend Joseph Paice, acting as trustee for Thomas Lucas,[32] for £20,000. Land in Buckinghamshire was soon added at a cost of £16,000 and by 1800 his total investment in country estates exceeded £60,000. Yet more ambitious plans for life as a country landowner were fertilized; from 1801 he acquired from the Duke of Bedford land and a great house, Stratton Park, at Stratton in Hampshire to create "the Kingdom of Stratton".[23] By 1803 his expenditure had reached £150,000, partly funded through the sale of his Buckinghamshire land. In 1802 he transferred his London home from above his business in Devonshire Square to Hill Street in the West End.

The architect George Dance the Younger was commissioned to remodel the house at Stratton, which was then filled with the finest furniture and best Old Masters. Baring's picture purchases had begun in 1795, when about £1500 was spent, and his expenditure grew apace after 1800; by 1808 he valued his acquisitions at £15,000. Dutch 17th-century masters were his particular passion but by 1804 he had "done with all except the very superior"; now only works by Rembrandt, Rubens, or Van Dyck "tempt me", but "the first must not be too dark, nor the second indecent".[33] He was a patron of Sir Thomas Lawrence, whom he summoned to Stratton in 1806 to paint a magisterial triple portrait of Baring with his two senior partners as a memorial to his business achievement.

Otherwise, Baring's distractions from business were few. As chairman from 1803 to 1810 of the Patriotic Fund administered by Lloyd's of London, he worked for the welfare of Britons wounded or bereaved during the French wars. The mercantile community sought his help as referee in settling disputes, and as a trustee he gave distinguished service in settling the affairs of the leading London merchants, Boyd, Benfield & Co., which had crashed in 1799. He held the presidency of the London Institution from 1805 until his death. As a pamphleteer his output was modest, with works on the Commutation Act in 1786, on the Bank of England in 1797, and on the affairs of Walter Boyd in 1801.

In the 25 years from 1777, Baring had transformed his firm into one of London's most powerful merchant banking houses; by about 1786 he reckoned that it was "in a very flourishing situation, totally divested of moonshine".[34] By 1800 a network of influential correspondents stretched across Europe; agencies were held for leading Boston and Philadelphia merchants; leadership in marketing British government debt was undisputed; Baring was a respected adviser to senior politicians; his leadership in the East India Company had provided influence in trade east of Africa; and, not least, important commissions had been won from foreign governments. Francis Baring was Barings, and he dominated management, provided most of the capital, and received the lion's share of the profits.

Family edit

On 12 May 1767, at St John the Baptist, Croydon, Baring married Harriet Herring (1750–1804), and their children were:

- Mary who married Grenville Temple, the son of Sir Grenville Temple, 9th Baronet and grandson of John Temple
- Maynard who married Henry Algernon Eliot, Captain, later Rear-Admiral, RN, son of Francis Perceval Eliot
  • Frances (31 January 1783 – 8 March 1825); she married Thomas Read Kemp, MP for Lewes. They had four sons, and six daughters.
  • Lydia (born 4 December 1786 – January 1854), married Philip Laycock Story, Rector of Walton on the Wolds, Leicestershire. They had six sons and seven daughters.

Over the years, his wife contributed about £20,000 to the family coffers, received from her merchant father, William Herring of Croydon, and a cousin, Thomas Herring, Archbishop of Canterbury. Her other contributions were her frugality in managing a household accommodated above the business and, between 1768 and 1787, a capacity to bear 10 children who attained adulthood. Later she emerged as a glittering social hostess, and introduced her husband to valuable business contacts. Harriet's sister Mary in 1766 married one of London's leading private bankers, Richard Stone of Martin & Co., with whom Francis Baring's firm had opened an account in 1764.

Prior to being ordained in the Church of England, George had founded a partnership in Canton that became the trading house of Dent & Co.[35]

Death and legacy edit

Sir Francis Baring died on 11 September 1810 at Lee, Kent, and his remains were interred in the family vault in the church of St. Mary the Virgin, Micheldever, Hampshire, England, on 20 September 1810.

His eldest son Thomas succeeded to the baronetcy and inherited the country estates. The size of Baring's estate underlines his achievements. His wealth at death was £606,000, with £70,000 in company holdings. £175,000 was distributed among his children other than Thomas, who inherited the balance; his capital remaining in Baring Brothers & Co. amounted to almost £70,000; his Hampshire and Lee estates were valued at £400,000; and his pictures, jewels, and furniture were worth almost £30,000.

Works edit

  • The Principle of the Commutation-Act established by Facts, 1786
  • Observations on the Establishment of the Bank of England, 1797
  • Further Observations on the Establishment of the Bank of England, 1797
  • Observations on the Publication of Walter Boyd, Esq., M.P., 1801

References edit

  1. ^ . Exeter Memories. 5 October 2010. Archived from the original on 6 October 2010. Retrieved 12 June 2010.
  2. ^ Tooke, Thomas (1844). An Inquiry Into The Currency Principle, The Connection Of The Currency With Prices, And The Expediency Of A Separation Of Issue From Banking. London.
  3. ^ Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, D1.
  4. ^ Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, D7.
  5. ^ a b c d Matthew, H. C. G.; Harrison, B., eds. (23 September 2004). "The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. ref:odnb/47125. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/47125. Retrieved 6 February 2023. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ "London and the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade - How the City Profited From Slavery". The New Black Magazine. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  7. ^ "The Manor House". The National Archives. Archived from the original on 3 August 2021. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  8. ^ "London: Centre of the Slave Trade - Slave Traders & Plantation Wealth". Historic England. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  9. ^ Barings archives, DEP249.
  10. ^ Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, B1.
  11. ^ The Times, 6 February 1806.
  12. ^ Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, N4.4.295.
  13. ^ Daily Advertiser, Oracle and True Briton, 12 October 1805.
  14. ^ Public Characters, 1805, 34.
  15. ^ a b c Barings archives, DEP193.40.
  16. ^ a b Chisholm 1911.
  17. ^ Public Characters, 1805.
  18. ^ Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, N4.5.
  19. ^ Eric J. Evans (2011). The Shaping of Modern Britain. Routledge. p. 34. ISBN 9781408225646.
  20. ^ Barings archives, DEP193.17.1.
  21. ^ "No. 13526". The London Gazette. 7 May 1793. p. 380.
  22. ^ C. H. Philips, The East India Company, 1784–1834, 1940, 164.
  23. ^ a b Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, A21.
  24. ^ Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, A19.
  25. ^ Barings archives, DEP3.3.3, Francis Baring to Alexander Baring, 20 May 1799.
  26. ^ New York Historical Society, Rufus King MSS, vol. 39, fol. 17.
  27. ^ New York Historical Society, Rufus King MSS, vol. 51, fol. 461.
  28. ^ New York Historical Society, Rufus King MSS, vol. 55, fols. 378–9
  29. ^ King, Rufus; King, Charles R (1894). The life and correspondence of Rufus King. New York: G. P. Putnam's sons. p. 219. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
  30. ^ a b Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, A4.
  31. ^ a b Barings archives, DEP193.17.1, Baring to Shelburne, 9 October 1802.
  32. ^ "Summary of Individual, Legacies of British Slave-ownership". www.ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  33. ^ Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, A4.3.
  34. ^ Barings archives, DEP193.17.1, Baring to Shelburne, n.d.
  35. ^ Le Pichon, Alain (2006). China Trade and Empire: Jardine, Matheson & Co. and the Origins of British Rule in Hong Kong 1827–1843. Oxford University Press/British Academy. p. 67. ISBN 9780197263372.

Attribution

Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Baring" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

Further reading edit

  • P. Ziegler, The sixth great power: Barings, 1762–1929 (1988)
  • R. W. Hidy, The house of Baring in American trade and finance: English merchant bankers at work, 1763–1861 (1949)
  • M. G. Buist, At spes non-fracta: Hope and Co., 1770–1815 (1974)
  • J. Orbell, Baring Brothers & Co. Limited: a history to 1939 (privately printed, London, 1985)
  • R. C. Alberts, The golden voyage: the life and times of William Bingham, 1752–1804 (1969)
  • N. Baker, Government and contractors: the British treasury and war suppliers, 1775–1783 (1971)
  • Public characters of 1809–10 (1809), appx 12, p. 590
  • 'Sir Francis Baring, Bart.', Public characters of 1805 (1805), 30–39
  • ING Barings, London, Barings archives

External links edit

  • "Archival material relating to Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet". UK National Archives.  
  • Francis Baring on the Risks and Rewards website, including portrait
  • The Hammersley Connection, showing the relationship of the Baring family to other banking families
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Grampound
1784–1790
With: Hon. John Sommers Cocks
Succeeded by
Thomas Wallace
Jeremiah Crutchley
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Wycombe
1794–1796
With: Earl Wycombe
Succeeded by
Preceded by
John Jekyll
Benjamin Vaughan
Member of Parliament for Calne
1796–1800
With: John Jekyll
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Member of Parliament for Calne
1801–1802
With: John Jekyll
Succeeded by
John Jekyll
Lord Henry Petty
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Wycombe
1802–1806
With: Sir John Dashwood-King, Bt
Succeeded by
Baronetage of Great Britain
New creation Baronet
(of Larkbeer, Devon)
1793 – 1810
Succeeded by

francis, baring, baronet, other, people, named, francis, baring, francis, baring, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challe. For other people named Francis Baring see Francis Baring disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sir Francis Baring 1st Baronet news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sir Francis Baring 1st Baronet 18 April 1740 11 September 1810 was an English merchant banker a member of the Baring family later becoming the first of the Baring baronets Sir Francis BaringBtSir Francis Baring in a painting by Sir Thomas LawrenceBorn 1740 04 18 18 April 1740Larkbeare House near ExeterDied11 September 1810 1810 09 11 aged 70 Lee LondonOccupationBankerSpouseHarriet Herring m 1767 1804 wbr Contents 1 Early life 2 John and Francis Baring Company 3 Independence from Exeter 4 Financial success 5 Network 6 Government adviser 7 Government business in the 1780s 8 The East India Company 9 Transactions with Hope amp Co 10 Wartime finance 11 American finance 12 Withdrawal from business 13 Private wealth 14 Family 15 Death and legacy 16 Works 17 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksEarly life editHe was born at Larkbeare House 1 near Exeter son of Johann Baring 1697 1748 a German cloth merchant who had settled in England by his English wife Elizabeth Vowler 1702 1766 daughter of a prosperous Exeter dry goods wholesaler at that time called a grocer Baring s father emigrated from Bremen Germany in 1717 and settled at Exeter where he became a leading wool manufacturer and textile merchant His premature death in 1748 resulted in Francis aged eight being brought up and strongly influenced by his mother Elizabeth Her sound business head nearly doubled the family s worth by the time of her death in 1766 In the early 1750s Francis was sent to London for education at Mr Fargue s French school at Hoxton and then at Mr Fuller s academy in Lothbury Samuel Touchet one of the leading Manchester and West Indian merchants in London accepted him in 1755 for a seven year apprenticeship charging his mother 800 Upon his release on Christmas Day 1762 he joined his two surviving brothers in the interlocking partnerships of John and Francis Baring amp Co of London and John and Charles Baring amp Co of Exeter Francis led the London concern and Charles the Exeter one while John a leading Exeter citizen and a Member of Parliament from 1776 was mainly a silent partner although nominally senior partner of both firms By 1807 the brothers had evolved the business into Baring Brothers amp Co Despite being partially deaf from an early age Francis did very well and by the mid 1790s had the full confidence of the British Parliament 2 John and Francis Baring Company editInitially the London business comprised the accounts and goodwill transferred to it from an old family friend Nathaniel Paice a London merchant who was retiring but also much business came from John and Charles Baring amp Co and other Exeter merchants who required a London agent Agency services for overseas merchants and trading speculations were soon added But the firm lost money in eight of its first fourteen years as Francis Baring learned how to judge markets having started out with 10 000 he reckoned that by 1777 his net worth stood at just 2 500 Notwithstanding these private reverses the City of London quickly recognized Baring s special qualities and in 1771 the Royal Exchange Assurance a giant public business appointed him to its court He underpinned his directorship which continued until 1780 with a holding of 820 in the company s stock no mean sum when his assets totalled 13 000 This appointment was important to hold for the first time he was marked out from the throng of merchants populating the courts and alleys of the city Independence from Exeter editBaring s early business was constrained through the demands placed upon it by the much larger Exeter firm which suffered under Charles Baring s speculations of a wild strange incoherent description 3 The resulting conflict was only resolved in early 1777 when Baring took the initiative in dissolving the interlocking partnerships Capital and management were now entirely separate though Francis maintained strong family links with Exeter Regularly he employed his wealth to rescue Charles from ruin and thus preserve the good name of his family his motivation was an intense desire to see business and family prosper Thus he was scandalized by Charles s almost monstrous management of the original and chief dependence of the Baring family 4 Baring s brother John remained a sleeping partner until his retirement in late 1800 In 1781 two nominal partners were appointed J F Mesturas formerly a clerk and Charles Wall who in September 1790 married Baring s eldest daughter Harriet Wall 5 The two nominees were soon afterwards promoted full partners However Mesturas withdrew in 1795 and was not replaced From 1777 until his retirement in 1804 Baring led the firm almost singlehandedly for many years having Wall died 1815 as his sole active partner Financial success editThe partnership capital grew steadily from 20 000 in 1777 to 70 000 in 1790 The next decade was to prove very profitable thanks to the fall of Amsterdam and the rise of London as centre of shipping trade thanks to the French wartime bans on shipping in Amsterdam Partnership capital peaked at 400 000 in 1804 Baring contributed the major share providing 12 in 1777 40 in 1790 and 54 in 1804 Annual profits rose to 40 000 in the 1790s and peaked atypically at over 200 000 in 1802 they were calculated after payment to partners at 4 interest sometimes 5 on their capital Baring s share of the profits increased steadily from a quarter in the mid 1760s to a half from 1777 and to three quarters from 1801 His total wealth business as well as private rose accordingly from almost 5 000 in 1763 to 64 000 in 1790 and to 500 000 in 1804 Network editEarly on Baring s business profits were derived mostly from international trade especially between Britain the western European coast the Iberian peninsula Italy the West Indies and from the 1770s North America They arose from trading on sole account or more often on joint account with other merchants from acting as London agent for overseas merchants buying and selling consignments making and collecting payments and arranging shipping and warehousing and in due course from trade finance through making advances or more frequently accepting bills of exchange In the West Indies Baring had major financial interests in sugar and slavery 6 It is said he made his fortune from the slave trade while only 16 years old 7 With the income he generated from these ventures Baring bought Manor House in 1796 8 The success of this work was greatly influenced by the establishment of a powerful network of corresponding houses in the main international trading centres These alliances with leading European and North American merchants were the keys to his success Hope amp Co of Amsterdam the most powerful merchant bank in Europe s leading financial centre was Baring s most valuable connection Their association is said to have begun in the 1760s when Henry Hope passed Baring some bills to negotiate and ended up exceedingly struck with the transaction which bespoke not only great zeal and activity but what was still more important either good credit or great resources From that day Baring became one of their principal friends 9 The link was consolidated in other ways in particular through the marriage in 1796 of Pierre Cesar Labouchere see under Hope family a leading figure at Hopes to Baring s third daughter Dorothy Vital connections were also established on the other side of the Atlantic Baring was quicker than most to see the commercial potential of Britain s North American colonies and his finance house quickly emerged as the European hub of a network of North America s most powerful merchants In 1774 his first American customer was the leading Philadelphia merchant Willing Morris amp Co its influential partners included Robert Morris a future financial architect of American independence from Britain and Thomas Willing a future president of the Bank of the United States Through them Baring was introduced to Senator William Bingham one of America s wealthiest men a connection which gave rise to several lucrative transactions Government adviser editBaring s work from 1782 as an adviser on commercial matters to cabinet ministers propelled him from relative obscurity to the inner circles of British political life underlining how his influence had grown The catalyst for this advancement was his Devon connections His brother John was elected to parliament as a member for Exeter in 1776 more importantly in 1780 his sister Elizabeth married another MP and fellow Devonian John Dunning A rich and influential lawyer Dunning was allied to Lord Shelburne a powerful Whig politician who held progressive views on political economy and whose borough of Calne Dunning represented in Parliament In July 1782 following Shelburne s promotion to Prime Minister and Dunning s appointment as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Baring fulfilled the new Prime Minister s need to have recourse from time to time to mercantile advice 10 Baring by instinct a Whig became Shelburne s confidential adviser on commerce or his handy City man according to a discontented William Cobbett Baring s ideas on political economy and commerce were well ahead of his time in 1799 he defended the Bank of England s decision in 1797 to suspend specie payments as both correct and inevitable in the face of hostile opposition from many of his peers Baring s knowledge of North American merchants and trade made him especially useful in the closing years of the American War of Independence when Shelburne anxious for a liberal settlement invited his comments on commercial aspects of the proposed peace treaty with the United States Shelburne introduced Baring to Isaac Barre his paymaster general and to such leading luminaries as William Pitt the Younger Henry Dundas Jeremy Bentham Edmund Burke Sir Samuel Romilly and Lords Erskine Camden and Sydney However Baring s friendship with Lord Lansdowne as Shelburne became in 1784 Dunning and Barre ran particularly deep and in 1787 he drew public attention to it by commissioning their triple portrait from Sir Joshua Reynolds A private financial connection also existed For six years from 1783 Baring loaned Lansdowne 5 000 on security of a debt owing to Lansdowne In 1805 on Lansdowne s death Baring became a trustee of his estate charged with the task of liquidating debts of 90 000 Baring was not nearly as close to the Tory leader William Pitt who followed Lansdowne as Prime Minister and who held office almost continuously until Baring s retirement from active business Their views were far apart and on Pitt s death Baring was quick to stress their lack of concurrence on any great political question for above 20 years our political opinions and principles being different 11 In particular he disagreed with Pitt s policy for the seemingly endless continuation of a wasteful war they also suffered differences over government policy towards the East India Company Baring s personal influence in government waned but his expert advice always fairly delivered continued to be provided on such matters as trade with Turkey the importance of Gibraltar and the funding of the national debt As part of Pitt s cleansing of abuse from public office in 1784 he appointed Baring a commissioner charged with investigating fees gratuities and prerequisites for holding certain offices The link with Lansdowne led Baring to the Commons in 1784 when at a cost of 3 000 he was elected MP for Grampound Cornwall He was ousted six years later after which he stood unsuccessfully for Ilchester Later he sat for Lansdowne s safe boroughs of Chipping Wycombe Buckinghamshire 1794 6 and 1802 6 and Calne Wiltshire 1796 1802 which had formerly been represented by other Lansdowne favourites Dunning and Barre Notwithstanding his admission that my voice is so very unequal to the House of Commons 12 his speeches were reckoned to be neat flowing and perspicuous aiming more by solidity of argument to arrest and convince his hearers than by beautiful figures and impassioned eloquence to mislead the minds of men 13 Both in private and from the benches Baring advocated greater freedom of trade Every regulation he said is a restriction and as such contrary to that freedom which I have held to be the first principle of the well being of commerce for good measure adding that a restriction or regulation may doubtless answer the particular purpose for which it is imposed but as commerce is not a simple thing but a thing of a thousand relations what may be of profit in the particular may be ruinous in general 14 Government business in the 1780s editThere can be little doubt that Baring s firm benefited directly as well as indirectly from his political connections in particular from Barre s almost limitless patronage as paymaster general during the American War of Independence In 1782 he advised Lansdowne that in 1781 and 1782 contractors profits from supplying the army abroad represented over 13 of the total value of transactions Baring won the 1783 contract on the basis of 1 commission and when war ended and the contract was terminated prematurely he won contracts for the disposal of stores Government savings were at least 10 and Baring was personally rewarded in other ways Between 1784 and 1786 he and not his firm received 7 000 in commissions for undertaking government work and a further 4 250 from interest on government money in his hands Against this in his private accounts he charged the 3 000 expenses incurred in winning his Commons seat in 1784 Nevertheless transactions for the government stretched his resources in these years He apparently borrowed stock from Martin amp Co his brother in law s firm to enable me to negotiate the government business 15 Yet the returns on these risky adventures were clearly immense During the war when government expenditure soared his firm also emerged as a contractor for marketing British government debt it was believed to have made profits of 19 000 The East India Company editFrancis Baring s other distraction from his firm was his directorship of the East India Company from 1779 16 By 1783 he led the City interest on the company s court and in 1786 he was reckoned its most able member His commitment was significant he gave up each Wednesday and occasionally a Friday to its affairs Notwithstanding his views on the liberalization of American trade he promoted the company s monopoly and commercial independence with an ardour contrary to the usual moderation of his character 17 He joined the East India Company when the British government was anxious to exert greater political control over it recognizing the great territorial power that it had become Baring actively fought off the far reaching proposals of Lord North and Charles James Fox believing that India is not a colony and God forbid that it ever should be 18 but he worked with an old friend from the period of his apprenticeship and now a fellow director Richard Atkinson to modify and facilitate the acceptance of Pitt s India Act In 1792 and 1793 as Pitt s preferred candidate he was elected chairman and charged with the task of renegotiating the company s charter 19 The experience of his chairmanship was both exhausting and distracting His private accounts went unwritten for two years and in 1792 being obliged to travel for my health 15 he was utterly unprepared for the collapse in prices of British government securities which reduced his private capital of 20 000 by half The more I work he confided to Lansdowne the greater the degree of jealousy and difficulty I have to encounter amongst the directors who are in general composed of either knaves or fools 20 Pitt rewarded Baring with a baronetcy on 29 May 1793 21 16 and he soldiered on as a director until his death in 1810 but increasingly he was disillusioned and absent from the court As early as 1798 he had lost much of that consequence which his superior knowledge experience and abilities entitle him to 22 Transactions with Hope amp Co editThroughout Baring s lifetime his good commercial intelligence sound judgement nimble footedness and instinct for speculative profit remained the hallmarks of his business style Thousands of speculations detailed in his firm s ledgers attest to this but his burgeoning business and rising confidence were graphically illustrated in 1787 when Hope amp Co introduced him to speculation on a grand scale The two houses set about controlling the entire European cochineal market by secretly buying up all available stocks one quarter for Barings and the rest for Hopes Correspondents from Saint Petersburg to Cadiz spent 450 000 but prices remained static and in 1788 with a huge loss anticipated the partners of Barings agreed to forgo any participation of the profits of the trade for the last year 15 The resumption of war in 1793 provided new challenges and opportunities The evacuation of Hopes to London between 1795 and 1803 when Amsterdam was occupied by France and the availability of their expertise contacts and capital to Barings were of immense assistance The two houses embarked on bold transactions invariably with a quarter for Barings and the rest for Hopes Their first adventure was entirely private and aimed to secure a substantial part of their capital from the dangers of European revolutions and wars In late 1795 Baring dispatched his 22 year old son Alexander to Boston to negotiate and execute the purchase of more than 1 million acres 4 000 km2 of land in Maine for 107 000 The investment was introduced by the land s owner Senator William Bingham son in law of Barings Philadelphia correspondent Thomas Willing and yet another friend of Lansdowne Francis Baring undertook the initial appraisal and commitment to the investment and the negotiations were left to his son Alexander who afterwards remained in North America as Barings representative and who consolidated his position by marrying Bingham s eldest daughter Ann Louisa The link was further strengthened through the marriage of Baring s third son Henry to Bingham s other daughter Maria in 1802 Both marriages brought considerable wealth to the Baring family Wartime finance editBritish government expenditure which grew to unprecedented levels during the European wars created great opportunities for London merchant bankers such as Sir Francis Baring After 1799 his firm headed the list of public debt contractors in twelve of the next fifteen years supposedly giving rise to total profits of 190 000 For Baring a key financier of the nation s war effort it represented the pinnacle of his power and standing Despite his retirement in 1804 he continued to appear as a contractor until his death because as he explained it was thought my name would be useful in the opinion of the publick 23 Britain s European allies needed funds and came to Baring who with Hopes now organized some of the first marketings of foreign bonds in London Believing fervently that it may be desirable not to have the subject to discuss with our own Ministers as you know very well how ignorant they are of foreign finance 24 in 1801 he dispatched his son in law P C Labouchere of Hopes and his son George to negotiate a loan to the court of Lisbon The resulting Portuguese diamond loan of 13 million guilders was shared between Barings and Hopes on the usual 25 75 basis Of equal strategic importance was Baring s transmission of British government subsidies to allied governments to support their war efforts This highly secret and sensitive work required expert knowledge of money transmission and a sound correspondent network again it underlined the government s confidence in Baring Opportunities for direct financing of the enemy were also presented to Baring who knew he could hoodwink the government into consenting to them but to have obtained that licence we must have presented a memorial so equivocal and in truth so unfounded that it would not suit us and therefore was abandoned 25 Baring applied a looser criterion in his choice of trading partners however Links with leading American merchants such as the Codmans of Boston Willing and Francis of Philadelphia Robert Gilmour and Robert Oliver amp Brothers of Baltimore were now immensely important to Barings business as its axis swung from continental European to transatlantic trade In sustaining these extensive connections Baring undoubtedly facilitated albeit passively the breaching of Britain s continental blockade American finance editClose connections with American merchants inevitably resulted in links with the United States government Since the close of the American War of Independence Baring had kept watch over the American government s finances in Europe However his first significant transaction for its account was the sale in 1795 of 800 000 worth of stock and the remittance of the proceeds in support of American negotiations with the north African Barbary powers To secure the transaction Francis Baring admitted to acting with zeal perhaps imprudence in going beyond the letters of my orders 26 but the American ambassador in London commended his liberal and skilful manner and undertook to ensure that the government would entertain a proper sense of your Service in this Business 27 Other business soon followed including the sale of the government s shares in the Bank of the United States and the purchase of munitions from British manufactures for the government s account Barings was considered to be an English house of the first reputation and solidity 28 After the failure of Bird Savage amp Bird in 1803 Barings was appointed to replace them as London financial agent for the United States government leaving Sir Francis Baring s influence in North American financial affairs unrivalled in London 29 At about this time when a short interval of peace existed after the treaty of Amiens Baring led his house alongside Hopes into its largest and most prestigious transaction yet financing the Louisiana Purchase The French government wanted to sell 1 000 000 square miles 2 600 000 km2 of the Territory of Louisiana and the United States administration wanted to buy it the purchase price was 15 million and Francis Baring was charged with finding it He sent his son Alexander to Paris to negotiate with French and American representatives and the eventual result was that on behalf of the French government Barings and Hopes sold US government bonds worth 11 25 million The business was of enormous size my nerves are equal to the operation Francis Baring reassured Hopes but he added that we all tremble about the magnitude of the American account 30 Later he confessed that what I suffered can never be described and it completely overpowered my nerves for the first and I hope last time 30 The leading American house in London also acted as London banker for the Bank of the United States Here again the close network of correspondents and friends which Baring so earnestly cultivated was vital Thomas Willing William Bingham s father in law and Barings client at Philadelphia since 1774 was the bank s president and so its use of Baring s firm in making London payments undertaking exchange transactions and providing credits was seemingly inevitable Withdrawal from business editBaring aimed to strengthen his links with Hopes even further through his son joining their partnership but Alexander Baring could not be persuaded to comply Baring s ultimate goal was to establish a house under his control based on both Barings and Hopes which would straddle the North Sea dominate government finance in Europe and provide an enormously powerful base for its American connections Alexander s reluctance compelled him to abandon the colossal plan of one foot in England the other in Holland 31 It was a sacrifice such as no head of a family ever made before he confided to Lansdowne but I must confess there is enough left for consolation 31 In 1803 Baring began his withdrawal from business when he gave up his entitlement to a share of his firm s profits Much of his capital remained on loan by the time of his death in 1810 he still provided 70 000 or about 17 of the firm s resources He stood down as partner in 1804 handing the reins to Charles Wall the principal manager according to Farrington and his three eldest sons Thomas Alexander and Henry In recognition of their assumption of leadership in 1807 the nameplate of Francis Baring amp Co was taken down and replaced by that of Baring Brothers amp Co Private wealth editBaring s accumulation of great wealth allowed him to diversify his pursuits in gentlemanly living In 1790 he began to acquire property at Beddington in Surrey based around Camden House and in 1796 he bought Manor House Lee a relatively modest country house about six miles 10 km south east of central London from his old friend Joseph Paice acting as trustee for Thomas Lucas 32 for 20 000 Land in Buckinghamshire was soon added at a cost of 16 000 and by 1800 his total investment in country estates exceeded 60 000 Yet more ambitious plans for life as a country landowner were fertilized from 1801 he acquired from the Duke of Bedford land and a great house Stratton Park at Stratton in Hampshire to create the Kingdom of Stratton 23 By 1803 his expenditure had reached 150 000 partly funded through the sale of his Buckinghamshire land In 1802 he transferred his London home from above his business in Devonshire Square to Hill Street in the West End The architect George Dance the Younger was commissioned to remodel the house at Stratton which was then filled with the finest furniture and best Old Masters Baring s picture purchases had begun in 1795 when about 1500 was spent and his expenditure grew apace after 1800 by 1808 he valued his acquisitions at 15 000 Dutch 17th century masters were his particular passion but by 1804 he had done with all except the very superior now only works by Rembrandt Rubens or Van Dyck tempt me but the first must not be too dark nor the second indecent 33 He was a patron of Sir Thomas Lawrence whom he summoned to Stratton in 1806 to paint a magisterial triple portrait of Baring with his two senior partners as a memorial to his business achievement Otherwise Baring s distractions from business were few As chairman from 1803 to 1810 of the Patriotic Fund administered by Lloyd s of London he worked for the welfare of Britons wounded or bereaved during the French wars The mercantile community sought his help as referee in settling disputes and as a trustee he gave distinguished service in settling the affairs of the leading London merchants Boyd Benfield amp Co which had crashed in 1799 He held the presidency of the London Institution from 1805 until his death As a pamphleteer his output was modest with works on the Commutation Act in 1786 on the Bank of England in 1797 and on the affairs of Walter Boyd in 1801 In the 25 years from 1777 Baring had transformed his firm into one of London s most powerful merchant banking houses by about 1786 he reckoned that it was in a very flourishing situation totally divested of moonshine 34 By 1800 a network of influential correspondents stretched across Europe agencies were held for leading Boston and Philadelphia merchants leadership in marketing British government debt was undisputed Baring was a respected adviser to senior politicians his leadership in the East India Company had provided influence in trade east of Africa and not least important commissions had been won from foreign governments Francis Baring was Barings and he dominated management provided most of the capital and received the lion s share of the profits Family editOn 12 May 1767 at St John the Baptist Croydon Baring married Harriet Herring 1750 1804 and their children were Harriet 1768 1838 was a religious controvertionalist who married Charles Wall 1756 1815 a partner of Baring Brothers their only son was Charles Baring Wall MP 1795 1853 5 Maria born 1769 who married Richard Stainforth and was the mother of George and Francis Stainforth Dorothy Elizabeth born 1771 married the banker Pierre Cesar Labouchere of Hylands They had two sons Henry Labouchere 1st Baron Taunton and John Peter Labouchere who was the father of Henry Du Pre Labouchere Thomas 5 1772 1848 Alexander 1774 1848 Catherine born 1775 Henry 1777 1848 William Baring born 1778 died young William 12 August 1779 9 July 1820 married Frances Poulett Thomson half sister of Charles Poulett Thomson 1st Baron Sydenham They had four children George 5 23 September 1781 4 October 1854 He married Harriet Rochfort D Oyly daughter of Sir John Hadley D Oyly 6th Baronet with issue 4 sons and 6 daughters including Mary who married Grenville Temple the son of Sir Grenville Temple 9th Baronet and grandson of John Temple Maynard who married Henry Algernon Eliot Captain later Rear Admiral RN son of Francis Perceval Eliot dd Frances 31 January 1783 8 March 1825 she married Thomas Read Kemp MP for Lewes They had four sons and six daughters Lydia born 4 December 1786 January 1854 married Philip Laycock Story Rector of Walton on the Wolds Leicestershire They had six sons and seven daughters Over the years his wife contributed about 20 000 to the family coffers received from her merchant father William Herring of Croydon and a cousin Thomas Herring Archbishop of Canterbury Her other contributions were her frugality in managing a household accommodated above the business and between 1768 and 1787 a capacity to bear 10 children who attained adulthood Later she emerged as a glittering social hostess and introduced her husband to valuable business contacts Harriet s sister Mary in 1766 married one of London s leading private bankers Richard Stone of Martin amp Co with whom Francis Baring s firm had opened an account in 1764 Prior to being ordained in the Church of England George had founded a partnership in Canton that became the trading house of Dent amp Co 35 Death and legacy editSir Francis Baring died on 11 September 1810 at Lee Kent and his remains were interred in the family vault in the church of St Mary the Virgin Micheldever Hampshire England on 20 September 1810 His eldest son Thomas succeeded to the baronetcy and inherited the country estates The size of Baring s estate underlines his achievements His wealth at death was 606 000 with 70 000 in company holdings 175 000 was distributed among his children other than Thomas who inherited the balance his capital remaining in Baring Brothers amp Co amounted to almost 70 000 his Hampshire and Lee estates were valued at 400 000 and his pictures jewels and furniture were worth almost 30 000 Works editThe Principle of the Commutation Act established by Facts 1786 Observations on the Establishment of the Bank of England 1797 Further Observations on the Establishment of the Bank of England 1797 Observations on the Publication of Walter Boyd Esq M P 1801References edit Larkbeare House or 38 Holloway Street Exeter Memories 5 October 2010 Archived from the original on 6 October 2010 Retrieved 12 June 2010 Tooke Thomas 1844 An Inquiry Into The Currency Principle The Connection Of The Currency With Prices And The Expediency Of A Separation Of Issue From Banking London Barings archives Northbrook MSS D1 Barings archives Northbrook MSS D7 a b c d Matthew H C G Harrison B eds 23 September 2004 The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp ref odnb 47125 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 47125 Retrieved 6 February 2023 Subscription or UK public library membership required London and the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade How the City Profited From Slavery The New Black Magazine Retrieved 22 March 2022 The Manor House The National Archives Archived from the original on 3 August 2021 Retrieved 22 March 2022 London Centre of the Slave Trade Slave Traders amp Plantation Wealth Historic England Retrieved 22 March 2022 Barings archives DEP249 Barings archives Northbrook MSS B1 The Times 6 February 1806 Barings archives Northbrook MSS N4 4 295 Daily Advertiser Oracle and True Briton 12 October 1805 Public Characters 1805 34 a b c Barings archives DEP193 40 a b Chisholm 1911 Public Characters 1805 Barings archives Northbrook MSS N4 5 Eric J Evans 2011 The Shaping of Modern Britain Routledge p 34 ISBN 9781408225646 Barings archives DEP193 17 1 No 13526 The London Gazette 7 May 1793 p 380 C H Philips The East India Company 1784 1834 1940 164 a b Barings archives Northbrook MSS A21 Barings archives Northbrook MSS A19 Barings archives DEP3 3 3 Francis Baring to Alexander Baring 20 May 1799 New York Historical Society Rufus King MSS vol 39 fol 17 New York Historical Society Rufus King MSS vol 51 fol 461 New York Historical Society Rufus King MSS vol 55 fols 378 9 King Rufus King Charles R 1894 The life and correspondence of Rufus King New York G P Putnam s sons p 219 Retrieved 15 October 2020 a b Barings archives Northbrook MSS A4 a b Barings archives DEP193 17 1 Baring to Shelburne 9 October 1802 Summary of Individual Legacies of British Slave ownership www ucl ac uk Retrieved 5 July 2020 Barings archives Northbrook MSS A4 3 Barings archives DEP193 17 1 Baring to Shelburne n d Le Pichon Alain 2006 China Trade and Empire Jardine Matheson amp Co and the Origins of British Rule in Hong Kong 1827 1843 Oxford University Press British Academy p 67 ISBN 9780197263372 AttributionChisholm Hugh ed 1911 Baring Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Further reading editP Ziegler The sixth great power Barings 1762 1929 1988 R W Hidy The house of Baring in American trade and finance English merchant bankers at work 1763 1861 1949 M G Buist At spes non fracta Hope and Co 1770 1815 1974 J Orbell Baring Brothers amp Co Limited a history to 1939 privately printed London 1985 R C Alberts The golden voyage the life and times of William Bingham 1752 1804 1969 N Baker Government and contractors the British treasury and war suppliers 1775 1783 1971 Public characters of 1809 10 1809 appx 12 p 590 Sir Francis Baring Bart Public characters of 1805 1805 30 39 ING Barings London Barings archives Leigh Rayment s list of baronetsExternal links edit Archival material relating to Sir Francis Baring 1st Baronet UK National Archives nbsp Francis Baring on the Risks and Rewards website including portrait The Hammersley Connection showing the relationship of the Baring family to other banking familiesParliament of Great BritainPreceded bySir John Ramsden BtThomas Lucas Member of Parliament for Grampound1784 1790 With Hon John Sommers Cocks Succeeded byThomas WallaceJeremiah CrutchleyPreceded byEarl WycombeSir John Jervis Member of Parliament for Wycombe1794 1796 With Earl Wycombe Succeeded byEarl WycombeSir John Dashwood King BtPreceded byJohn JekyllBenjamin Vaughan Member of Parliament for Calne1796 1800 With John Jekyll Succeeded byParliament of the United KingdomParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byParliament of Great Britain Member of Parliament for Calne1801 1802 With John Jekyll Succeeded byJohn JekyllLord Henry PettyPreceded byEarl WycombeSir John Dashwood King Bt Member of Parliament for Wycombe1802 1806 With Sir John Dashwood King Bt Succeeded bySir John Dashwood King BtThomas BaringBaronetage of Great BritainNew creation Baronet of Larkbeer Devon 1793 1810 Succeeded byThomas Baring Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sir Francis Baring 1st Baronet amp oldid 1186181903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.