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George Colebrooke

Sir George Colebrooke, 2nd Baronet (14 June 1729 – 5 August 1809), of Gatton in Surrey, was an English merchant banker, Member of Parliament for Arundel from 1754-1774 and chairman of the East India Company from 1767-1772. He was conspicuous by his wealth and ostentation, and the ambitious and speculative nature of his financial activities. Colebrooke was known as a stockjobber and a Nabob with close ties to Robert Clive and Alexander Fordyce.[1] Colebrooke bankrupted himself through unwise speculations in the crisis of 1772.

The present times, or the nabobs Clive and Colebroke brought to account

Early life edit

Colebrooke was born in 1729 at Chilham, Kent, the third son of James Colebrooke, a London banker, and was educated at Leiden University around 1745,[2] likewise John Wilkes and Charles Townshend. He acquired Arnos Grove house in 1752 on the death of his father.[3]

His older brothers were Robert Colebrooke and James Colebrooke. Robert was Member for Maldon, Essex from 1741-1761. In 1751 James bought control of one seat in the rotten borough, Gatton in Surrey, for £23,000, and was sitting in Parliament. From 1754 the brothers were at first Opposition Whigs, but switched support to the Duke of Newcastle's government and were rewarded in 1759 with the creation of a baronetcy for James (who had daughters but no son) and a special remainder of the baronetcy to George. When James died, and Robert was appointed as ambassador to Switzerland, George inherited both the baronetcy, Gatton Park and the Lordship of the Manor at Gatton with its guaranteed control of one of the parliamentary seats there. He had Gatton Park landscaped by Capability Brown between 1762 and 1768. He offered Jean Jacques Rousseau to live on his estate.[4]

Career edit

 
Arnos Grove house in 1816
 
Gatton House in Gatton Park
 
Engraving of East India House, Leadenhall Street (1766)

In 1761 George was left in sole charge of the family bank in Threadneedle Street, and invested some of his wealth in buying up control of the borough of Arundel in Sussex, where the family lived. Arundel was not a classic pocket borough, where the power to return MPs was literally tied to property rights that could be freely bought and sold, but a thoroughly corrupt one where bribery was routine and where maintaining influence of the elections required constant expenditure. Nevertheless, Colebrooke kept control for twenty years, sitting himself as Arundel's MP from 1754 to 1774 and for most of the period being able to choose also who held the other seat.[5]

More valuably, however, Colebrooke's support for Newcastle ensured his eligibility for lucrative government contracts.[6] By 1762, he held two of these contracts, one for remitting money to the British forces in the American colonies and the other for victualling the troops there. But with Newcastle's fall from power in that year, Colebrooke was immediately ejected from one contract by the new government, and the other was not renewed when it expired in 1765.[7] Though offered compensation or new contracts on the formation of the Rockingham government, he preferred instead to accept a well-paid post as chirographer to the Court of Common Pleas. From this point onwards although he retained his seat in Parliament he was rarely active there.

In 1764, he became a partner in a Dublin bank.[8] Colebrooke's business interests were diverse. He speculated in land, buying large estates in Lanarkshire, and purchased plantations in Antigua (where his wife already had interests), Grenada and Dominica and was a slave-owner.[5] He was also a member of a syndicate to settle the Ohio Valley in 1768, and had interests in New England. (Colebrook, New Hampshire is named in his honour.) Two interests in particular, however, led to his eventual downfall: his involvement in the East India Company and his speculations in raw materials.[9]

By 1771, Colebrooke clearly desired a new interior decorative scheme for 23 Arlington Street, and he hired Robert Adam to produce designs for at least seven rooms, and a selection of furniture. It is unlikely that any of Adam's designs for Colebrooke were completed owing to the start of his financial problems at around the same time.[10][11][4]

1773 edit

 
Shah Allum in distress; representation of Sir George Colebrooke

Colebrooke was a full-time Director of the East India Company from 1767 to 1771, Deputy Chairman 1768-69 and was elected Chairman three times, in 1769, 1770 and 1772.[4] His final year in office was a disastrous one: the company got into financial difficulties (which led to the passing of the Regulating Act of 1773), he was accused of speculating in its stock while Chairman, and was left heavily in debt to a number of the other leading figures in the company, partly through arrangements to procure votes in the company's elections. (In 1771 he, Sir William Pulteney and Sir James Cockburn recruited Paul Wentworth (spy) borrowed £66,000 together from Hope & Co.[4]) He lost much larger sums, however, speculating on raw materials - hemp, flax, lead, logwood and alum, and the fall or rises of the market value of EIC-stocks. In 1771 he lost £190,000 dealing in hemp; from 1772 he was attempting to corner the world's supply of alum, buying up mines in Yorkshire and Lancashire, and saw much of the remainder of his fortune swallowed up when the market collapsed as part of the financial crisis of 1772.[9]

At first, Colebrooke was able to stay in business with assistance from the Bank of England, but his bank temporarily stopped payment on 31 March 1773, and permanently (after three years in the control of trustees appointed by his creditors) on 7 August 1776. Most of his property, including his share in the rotten borough at Gatton and art collection, was sold in 1774 to meet his liabilities, and a commission of bankruptcy was taken out against him in 1777.[12] Yet at the same period he was spending considerable sums on the rebuilding of his London house at 32 Soho Square.[13] The mansion was sold to Sir Joseph Banks in 1779.[13]

Later life edit

Between 1777-78, he retired to Boulogne-sur-Mer, so poor that the East India Company had to vote him a pension, but later moved to Soissons, after Robert died.[2] In 1789, during the French Revolution, he returned to England and managed eventually to pay his creditors in full so that some inheritance was left for his descendants. He played a prominent role in Bath, Somerset, particularly in the philanthropic arena.[14]

Marriage edit

 
Soho Square, from Ackermann's Repository of Arts, 1812

He had married Mary Gayner, daughter of Peter Gayner of Antigua, in 1754, and they had three sons and three daughters:

  • Mary Colebrooke (born 1757)
  • George Colebrooke (1759–1809)
  • James Edward Colebrooke (1761–1838), and succeeded to the baronetcy
  • Harriet Colebrooke (1762–1785)
  • Louisa Colebrooke (born 1764)
  • Professor Henry Thomas Colebrooke (1765–1837)

He also raised his brother James' two daughters, Mary and Emma Colebrook from 1761 until they were married.[15]

References and sources edit

References

  1. ^ GAMBLING ON EMPIRE: COLONIAL INDIA AND THE RHETORIC OF “SPECULATION” IN BRITISH LITERATURE AND CULTURE, C.1769-1830 by JOHN C. LEFFEL (2013)
  2. ^ a b "The Shah of Allum: Sir George Colebrooke Stuart Boydell" (PDF). Historyofbath.org. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  3. ^ Mason, Tom. (1947) The Story of Southgate. Enfield: Meyers Brooks. p. 61.
  4. ^ a b c d Rocher, Rosane; Rocher, Ludo (17 June 2014). The Making of Western Indology: Henry Thomas Colebrooke and the East India Company. Routledge. ISBN 9781317579168. Retrieved 27 June 2022 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ a b "Summary of Individual | Legacies of British Slavery". Ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  6. ^ Page 51, Lewis Namier, The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III (2nd edition - London: St Martin's Press, 1957)
  7. ^ Pages 52-2, Lewis Namier, The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III (2nd edition - London: St Martin's Press, 1957)
  8. ^ Cokayne, George Edward. (Ed.) (1906) Complete baronetage. Vol. V. 1707-1800. Exeter: William Pollard. p. 116.
  9. ^ a b Lucy S. Sutherland (1964). "COLEBROOKE, George (1729-1809), of Gatton, Surr. |". In Namier, Sir Lewis; Brooke, John (eds.). The House of Commons 1754-1790. The History of Parliament Trust. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  10. ^ "Arlington Street, number 23, London: unexecuted designs for interior decoration for Sir George Colebrooke, 1771 (16)". Collections.soane.org. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  11. ^ "Drawings". Collections.soane.org. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  12. ^ Paul Kosmetatos. "FINANCIAL CONTAGION AND MARKET INTERVENTION IN THE 1772-3 CREDIT CRISIS" (PDF). Econsoc.hist.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  13. ^ a b "Soho Square Area: Portland Estate, Nos. 31-32 Soho Square, Twentieth Century House | British History Online". British-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  14. ^ Lucy Sutherland, ‘COLEBROOKE, George (1729-1809), of Gatton, Surr.’
  15. ^ Leatherdale, Duncan (19 March 2023). "Lady Tankerville: The botanist and secret scientist". BBC News. Retrieved 20 March 2023.

Sources

  • Edward Kimber and Richard Johnson, The Baronetage of England (London, 1771) The Baronetage of England: Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the English Baronets Now Existing ... Illustrated with Their Coats of Arms ... To which is Added an Account of Such Nova Scotia Baronets as are of English Families; and a Dictionary of Heraldry ... by E. Kimber and R. Johnson
  • Survey of London: volumes 33 and 34: St Anne Soho (1966), online at www.british-history.ac.uk
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
Theobald Taafe
Garton Orme
Member of Parliament for Arundel
1754–1774
With: Thomas Griffin 1754–1761
John Bristow 1761–1768
Lauchlin Macleane 1768–1771
John Stewart 1771–1774
Succeeded by
Baronetage of Great Britain
Preceded by Baronet
(of Gatton)
1761–1809
Succeeded by
James Edward Colebrooke

george, colebrooke, baronet, june, 1729, august, 1809, gatton, surrey, english, merchant, banker, member, parliament, arundel, from, 1754, 1774, chairman, east, india, company, from, 1767, 1772, conspicuous, wealth, ostentation, ambitious, speculative, nature,. Sir George Colebrooke 2nd Baronet 14 June 1729 5 August 1809 of Gatton in Surrey was an English merchant banker Member of Parliament for Arundel from 1754 1774 and chairman of the East India Company from 1767 1772 He was conspicuous by his wealth and ostentation and the ambitious and speculative nature of his financial activities Colebrooke was known as a stockjobber and a Nabob with close ties to Robert Clive and Alexander Fordyce 1 Colebrooke bankrupted himself through unwise speculations in the crisis of 1772 The present times or the nabobs Clive and Colebroke brought to account Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 1773 4 Later life 5 Marriage 6 References and sourcesEarly life editColebrooke was born in 1729 at Chilham Kent the third son of James Colebrooke a London banker and was educated at Leiden University around 1745 2 likewise John Wilkes and Charles Townshend He acquired Arnos Grove house in 1752 on the death of his father 3 His older brothers were Robert Colebrooke and James Colebrooke Robert was Member for Maldon Essex from 1741 1761 In 1751 James bought control of one seat in the rotten borough Gatton in Surrey for 23 000 and was sitting in Parliament From 1754 the brothers were at first Opposition Whigs but switched support to the Duke of Newcastle s government and were rewarded in 1759 with the creation of a baronetcy for James who had daughters but no son and a special remainder of the baronetcy to George When James died and Robert was appointed as ambassador to Switzerland George inherited both the baronetcy Gatton Park and the Lordship of the Manor at Gatton with its guaranteed control of one of the parliamentary seats there He had Gatton Park landscaped by Capability Brown between 1762 and 1768 He offered Jean Jacques Rousseau to live on his estate 4 Career edit nbsp Arnos Grove house in 1816 nbsp Gatton House in Gatton Park nbsp Engraving of East India House Leadenhall Street 1766 In 1761 George was left in sole charge of the family bank in Threadneedle Street and invested some of his wealth in buying up control of the borough of Arundel in Sussex where the family lived Arundel was not a classic pocket borough where the power to return MPs was literally tied to property rights that could be freely bought and sold but a thoroughly corrupt one where bribery was routine and where maintaining influence of the elections required constant expenditure Nevertheless Colebrooke kept control for twenty years sitting himself as Arundel s MP from 1754 to 1774 and for most of the period being able to choose also who held the other seat 5 More valuably however Colebrooke s support for Newcastle ensured his eligibility for lucrative government contracts 6 By 1762 he held two of these contracts one for remitting money to the British forces in the American colonies and the other for victualling the troops there But with Newcastle s fall from power in that year Colebrooke was immediately ejected from one contract by the new government and the other was not renewed when it expired in 1765 7 Though offered compensation or new contracts on the formation of the Rockingham government he preferred instead to accept a well paid post as chirographer to the Court of Common Pleas From this point onwards although he retained his seat in Parliament he was rarely active there In 1764 he became a partner in a Dublin bank 8 Colebrooke s business interests were diverse He speculated in land buying large estates in Lanarkshire and purchased plantations in Antigua where his wife already had interests Grenada and Dominica and was a slave owner 5 He was also a member of a syndicate to settle the Ohio Valley in 1768 and had interests in New England Colebrook New Hampshire is named in his honour Two interests in particular however led to his eventual downfall his involvement in the East India Company and his speculations in raw materials 9 By 1771 Colebrooke clearly desired a new interior decorative scheme for 23 Arlington Street and he hired Robert Adam to produce designs for at least seven rooms and a selection of furniture It is unlikely that any of Adam s designs for Colebrooke were completed owing to the start of his financial problems at around the same time 10 11 4 1773 edit nbsp Shah Allum in distress representation of Sir George Colebrooke Colebrooke was a full time Director of the East India Company from 1767 to 1771 Deputy Chairman 1768 69 and was elected Chairman three times in 1769 1770 and 1772 4 His final year in office was a disastrous one the company got into financial difficulties which led to the passing of the Regulating Act of 1773 he was accused of speculating in its stock while Chairman and was left heavily in debt to a number of the other leading figures in the company partly through arrangements to procure votes in the company s elections In 1771 he Sir William Pulteney and Sir James Cockburn recruited Paul Wentworth spy borrowed 66 000 together from Hope amp Co 4 He lost much larger sums however speculating on raw materials hemp flax lead logwood and alum and the fall or rises of the market value of EIC stocks In 1771 he lost 190 000 dealing in hemp from 1772 he was attempting to corner the world s supply of alum buying up mines in Yorkshire and Lancashire and saw much of the remainder of his fortune swallowed up when the market collapsed as part of the financial crisis of 1772 9 At first Colebrooke was able to stay in business with assistance from the Bank of England but his bank temporarily stopped payment on 31 March 1773 and permanently after three years in the control of trustees appointed by his creditors on 7 August 1776 Most of his property including his share in the rotten borough at Gatton and art collection was sold in 1774 to meet his liabilities and a commission of bankruptcy was taken out against him in 1777 12 Yet at the same period he was spending considerable sums on the rebuilding of his London house at 32 Soho Square 13 The mansion was sold to Sir Joseph Banks in 1779 13 Later life editBetween 1777 78 he retired to Boulogne sur Mer so poor that the East India Company had to vote him a pension but later moved to Soissons after Robert died 2 In 1789 during the French Revolution he returned to England and managed eventually to pay his creditors in full so that some inheritance was left for his descendants He played a prominent role in Bath Somerset particularly in the philanthropic arena 14 Marriage edit nbsp Soho Square from Ackermann s Repository of Arts 1812 He had married Mary Gayner daughter of Peter Gayner of Antigua in 1754 and they had three sons and three daughters Mary Colebrooke born 1757 George Colebrooke 1759 1809 James Edward Colebrooke 1761 1838 and succeeded to the baronetcy Harriet Colebrooke 1762 1785 Louisa Colebrooke born 1764 Professor Henry Thomas Colebrooke 1765 1837 He also raised his brother James two daughters Mary and Emma Colebrook from 1761 until they were married 15 References and sources editReferences GAMBLING ON EMPIRE COLONIAL INDIA AND THE RHETORIC OF SPECULATION IN BRITISH LITERATURE AND CULTURE C 1769 1830 by JOHN C LEFFEL 2013 a b The Shah of Allum Sir George Colebrooke Stuart Boydell PDF Historyofbath org Retrieved 27 June 2022 Mason Tom 1947 The Story of Southgate Enfield Meyers Brooks p 61 a b c d Rocher Rosane Rocher Ludo 17 June 2014 The Making of Western Indology Henry Thomas Colebrooke and the East India Company Routledge ISBN 9781317579168 Retrieved 27 June 2022 via Google Books a b Summary of Individual Legacies of British Slavery Ucl ac uk Retrieved 14 November 2021 Page 51 Lewis Namier The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III 2nd edition London St Martin s Press 1957 Pages 52 2 Lewis Namier The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III 2nd edition London St Martin s Press 1957 Cokayne George Edward Ed 1906 Complete baronetage Vol V 1707 1800 Exeter William Pollard p 116 a b Lucy S Sutherland 1964 COLEBROOKE George 1729 1809 of Gatton Surr In Namier Sir Lewis Brooke John eds The House of Commons 1754 1790 The History of Parliament Trust Retrieved 27 June 2022 Arlington Street number 23 London unexecuted designs for interior decoration for Sir George Colebrooke 1771 16 Collections soane org Retrieved 27 June 2022 Drawings Collections soane org Retrieved 27 June 2022 Paul Kosmetatos FINANCIAL CONTAGION AND MARKET INTERVENTION IN THE 1772 3 CREDIT CRISIS PDF Econsoc hist cam ac uk Retrieved 27 June 2022 a b Soho Square Area Portland Estate Nos 31 32 Soho Square Twentieth Century House British History Online British history ac uk Retrieved 27 June 2022 Lucy Sutherland COLEBROOKE George 1729 1809 of Gatton Surr Leatherdale Duncan 19 March 2023 Lady Tankerville The botanist and secret scientist BBC News Retrieved 20 March 2023 Sources Edward Kimber and Richard Johnson The Baronetage of England London 1771 The Baronetage of England Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the English Baronets Now Existing Illustrated with Their Coats of Arms To which is Added an Account of Such Nova Scotia Baronets as are of English Families and a Dictionary of Heraldry by E Kimber and R Johnson Survey of London volumes 33 and 34 St Anne Soho 1966 online at www british history ac uk Leigh Rayment s list of baronets Parliament of Great Britain Preceded byTheobald Taafe Garton Orme Member of Parliament for Arundel1754 1774 With Thomas Griffin 1754 1761John Bristow 1761 1768Lauchlin Macleane 1768 1771John Stewart 1771 1774 Succeeded byThomas Brand George Newnham Baronetage of Great Britain Preceded byJames Colebrooke Baronet of Gatton 1761 1809 Succeeded byJames Edward Colebrooke Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Colebrooke amp oldid 1221548147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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