SIR JOHN GLADSTONE, 1ST BARONET


'Sir John Gladstone, 1st Baronet' (11 December 17647 December 1851), was a Scottish merchant, Member of Parliament, and the father of the British Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone.

Contents
Early life
Marriage and family
Business
Politics
Later years
References
External links

Early life


Born in Leith, in Midlothian, Scotland, John Gladstones was the son of Thomas Gladstones (1732-1809) and Helen Neilson (1739-1806). Thomas Gladstones was a Leith corn merchant who had migrated there from Lanarkshire. John followed his father into the mercantile business, working first for his father's business, before basing himself in Liverpool in 1787, where he entered the house of grain merchants Corrie & Company as a clerk.
He was eventually taken into the firm as a partner, the name of the house becoming Corrie, Gladstone & Bradshaw. The business of the firm, and the wealth of its members, soon grew very large. Once he had settled in Liverpool, Gladstones dropped the "s" from his surname, although this was not legally regularised until 1835. In 1792 he married his first wife Jane Hall, the daughter of a Liverpool merchant. However, she died in 1798.

Marriage and family


In 1800, he married his second wife Anne MacKenzie Robertson, the daughter of the Provost of Dingwall in Ross-shire. They had six children together:
# Anne MacKenzie Gladstone (1802-1829)
# Sir Thomas Gladstone, 2nd Baronet (1804-1889)
# Robertson Gladstone (1805-1875) [1]
# John Neilson Gladstone (1807-1863)
# William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898)
# Helen Jane Gladstone (1814-1880)

Business


John Gladstone made a fortune trading in corn with the United States and cotton with Brazil. He acquired large sugar plantations in Jamaica and Demerara, and was Chairman of the West India Association. He used slaves on these estates and when the slave trade was abolished in the British Empire in 1833, he was active in obtaining compensation for slave owners.
After the abolition of slavery, John Gladstone used Indentured servants from India to work in slavery-like conditions in his sugar plantations. Knowing that a number of Indians had been sent to Mauritius as indentured labor[1], he hit upon the idea of using them in his plantations in the West Indies as well. In a letter dated January 4, 1836 to Messrs. Gillanders, Arbuthnot & Co of Calcutta, Gladstone expressed his desire to obtain labor from India [2]. He used false promises of light work, comfortable housing and schools to make work on Gladstone plantations appear attractive to prospective Indian migrants. Indians, on their arrival in British Guiana, became known as Hill Coolies [3]. From 1838 to 1917, over 200,000 Indians arrived under indentureship in British Guiana alone. They lived under harsh conditions in the plantations.[4]
After sixteen years of operations, Corrie, Gladstone & Bradshaw was dissolved and its business was continued by John Gladstone under the name of ''John Gladstone & Company''. His six brothers followed him from Leith to Liverpool, and he took his brother Robert into partnership with him. Their business became very extensive, having a large trade with Russia, and as sugar importers and West India merchants. In 1814, when the monopoly of the British East India Company was broken and trade with India and China was opened to competition, Gladstone's firm was the first to send a private ship to Calcutta.

Politics


Gladstone was also interested in politics. He was in favour of a qualified reform of the franchise and of Greek independence during the 1820s. At first he was a Whig, but he came to support the Tory George Canning, and became a Tory. In 1812 he presided over a meeting at Liverpool which was called to invite Canning to represent Liverpool in the House of Commons. Gladstone wanted to represent Liverpool himself, but this never happened. Instead, he was Member of Parliament for Lancaster (1818-1820), Woodstock (1820-1826), and Berwick-upon-Tweed (1826-1827). This rejection by Liverpool soured his relationship with the city.

Later years


Returning to his native Scotland after 42 years, in 1829 John Gladstone bought the Fasque Estate in Kincardineshire from Sir Alexander Ramsay for £80,000. In 1846 he was created a Baronet by the outgoing Prime Minister, Sir Robert Peel.
Sir John Gladstone died at Fasque House in December 1851, aged 86, and was buried at St Andrew's Episcopal Church at Fasque. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Sir Thomas Gladstone, 2nd Baronet.

References


1. http://www.wesleyan.edu/its/acs/projects/socsci/IK/SouthAsianDiaspora.htm
2. http://www.indiana.edu/~librcsd/etext/scoble/JANU1836.HTM
3. http://www.indiana.edu/~librcsd/etext/scoble/
4. http://www.cariwave.com/East_Indian_Indentureship.htm

External links



Guiana 1838 Movie

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