1834: On Charles Lloyd Norman (1833-1889), banker, son of George Wade Norman, an investor in the Australian Agricultural Company and Sibella Stone, C. L. Norman married a first wife, Julia Cameron, and then Emily Mangles (daughter of director of the New Zealand Company Ross Donelly Mangles and Harriet Newcombe). The name Mangles is a London-based convict contractor name as discussed below, with connections to Western Australian settlement.
This directory presents files on merchants working after 1800. Some of these files are on: London Bankers circa 1800, Plummer and Barham after 1804, Robert Brooks of the Australia Trade, India indigo business, W. S. Lindsay, shipowner, Joseph Somes, shipowner, and on Hodson's Lists of notable families of British-India. Lists of international British C19th investment companies , investor names, etc. |
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See Burke's Peerage &
Baronetage for Norman of Bromley Common. Youssef Cassis, 'Bankers in English
Society in the late eighteenth century', Economic History Review, Series 2,
Vol. 38, No. 2, May 1985., pp. 210-229., here p. 215. Sir Henry Clay, Lord Norman.
London, Macmillan, 1957. pp. 1-12., here, p. 6. David Kynaston, The City of
London: A World of its Own, 1815-1890. Vol. 1. London, Chatto and Windus, 1994.,
here, p. 29. G. W. Norman is a good example of how socially well-knit were bankers
of a reforming outlook. He was "friend and neighbour" at Bromley Common
to bankers such as Hankey, George Grote, Hay Cameron, Lubbock, Stone, Martin.
See also, Pike, Dissent, variously.
(Genealogically, the name Norman links three generations earlier to the families
of Stone and Herring, both names in banking history being instrumental in backing
the origins of the bank managed by the later Sir Francis Baring.)
References
other:
Norman - 1834: On Charles Lloyd Norman (1833-1889), banker, son of George Wade
Norman, an investor in the Australian Agricultural Company and Sibella Stone,
C. L. Norman married a first wife, Julia Cameron, and then Emily Mangles (daughter
of director of the New Zealand Company Ross Donelly Mangles and Harriet Newcombe).
The name Mangles is a London-based convict contractor name as discussed below,
with connections to Western Australian settlement. See Burke's Peerage &
Baronetage for Norman of Bromley Common. Youssef Cassis, 'Bankers in
English Society in the late eighteenth century', Economic History Review,
Series 2, Vol. 38, No. 2, May 1985., pp. 210-229., here p. 215. Sir Henry Clay,
Lord Norman. London, Macmillan, 1957. pp. 1-12., here, p. 6. David Kynaston,
The City of London: A World of its Own, 1815-1890. Vol. 1. London, Chatto
and Windus, 1994., here, p. 29. G. W. Norman is a good example of how socially
well-knit were bankers of a reforming outlook. He was "friend and neighbour"
at Bromley Common to bankers such as Hankey, George Grote, Hay Cameron, Lubbock,
Stone, Martin. See also, Pike, Dissent, variously.
(Genealogically, the name Norman links three generations earlier to the families
of Stone and Herring, both names in banking history being instrumental in backing
the origins of the bank managed by the later Sir Francis Baring.)
To find your way to more files on Merchant Networks topics related either chronologically, or alphabetically by merchant surname, go to the main file of Sitemap. |
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