John Manship

John Manship (1726–1816) was an English businessman in the City of London and landowner in Surrey, who for over 50 years was a director of the East India Company.

John Manship
Born22 July 1726[1]
Died26 November 1816[2]
Resting placeStoke Newington, Middlesex, England
NationalityBritish
Known forDirectorship of the East India Company
SpouseAnn Dowdeswell

Early life

Baptised on 4 August 1726 at the church of St Christopher le Stocks in the City of London, he was the first son of John Manship (1695–1749), a cloth merchant and son of the publisher Samuel Manship, and his wife Elizabeth (1706–1788), daughter of Robert Garbrand and his wife Mary Tredcroft.[3]

Business career

At the age of 29 he was first elected to the Court of Directors that controlled the East India Company as an overt supporter of Laurence Sulivan, who led what was called the India Interest. This faction of the board lost its influence with the death of Sulivan in 1786 and Manship then joined the group known as the City Interest. This brought him into conflict with Henry Dundas. As the most senior director, Manship was three times nominated for Deputy Chair of the Company, which would mean that he would then automatically progress to the Chair, but the hostility of Dundas ensured he never got the post. However he did serve on a number of committees including the Secret Committee, the most powerful. In May 1809, when he was aged 82, he was disqualified from further service.[4]

Landholdings

History of Field Place

On the death of his father in 1749 he inherited the manor of Biggin and Tamworth in the parish of Mitcham and on the death of his mother in 1788 he inherited the manor of Field Place in Compton. In 1804 he sold Biggin and Tamworth to James Moore, who used it to grow plants for his cosmetics business.[5] Field Place he sold shortly after 1808 to George Smallpeice.[6]

Death

He was buried with his father and mother[7] in the family vault at the church of St Mary in Stoke Newington on 3 December 1816[8] and his holograph will with several codicils was proved on 18 November 1817.[9]

Family

On 12 May 1748 in the church of St Christopher le Stocks he married his first cousin Ann (1727–1777), orphaned daughter of his aunt Elizabeth Manship (1701–1733) and her husband Richard Dowdeswell (1692–1730).[10] They had six children, but five died within days of birth and only Anne Manship (1755–1779) reached adulthood. As sole heiress of a prominent businessman and landowner, she was a desirable match and, still in her teens, in 1772 was persuaded to elope to Flanders by man about town and duellist Simon Goodman Ewart (1752–1812), son of a wealthy distiller and landowner. Eventually both fathers accepted the runaway marriage and after Anne's early death leaving three surviving children, Simon went to work for the East India Company in Bengal. His father-in-law in his will left him only one shilling (0.05 pounds, worth about 3.50 pounds in 2014) and explicitly left nothing to two of his three grandchildren: Anna Maria Ewart (1775–1849), wife of the Reverend George Maximilian Bethune (1772–1840), and her brother John Manship Ewart (1777–1834), who was the husband of Catherine Bethune (1779–1835). Everything went to the third grandchild Elizabeth Ewart (1773–1862), the wife of Robert Norman (1764–1813),[11] (whose diary recently changed hands).[12] Though she had nine children, none had offspring.

References

  1. https://familysearch.org/ John Manship, 4 August 1726; citing reference; FHL microfilm Q942.1 L1 V26CH. Retrieved 27 October 2015
  2. The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register for British and Foreign India, Nov 1816 " John Manship Esq aged 91 formerly a director of the East India Company " https://books.google.co.uk/ retrieved 29 October 2015
  3. https://familysearch.org/ John Manship, 4 August 1726; citing reference; FHL microfilm Q942.1 L1 V26CH. Retrieved 27 October 2015
  4. Tony Fuller, 12 January 2001, at http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/ citing (i) James Gordon Parker, 1977. The Directors of the East India Company, 1754–1790 and (ii) Cyril Henry Philips, Manchester Univ. Press, 1961. The East India Company: 1784–1834 retrieved 27 October 2015
  5. 'Parishes: Mitcham', in A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 4, ed. H E Malden (London, 1912), pp. 229–234 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/surrey/vol4/pp229-234. Retrieved 26 October 2015
  6. 'Parishes: Compton', in A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 3, ed. H E Malden (London, 1911), pp. 16–24 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/surrey/vol3/pp16-24. Retrieved 21 October 2015
  7. Daniel Lysons, 'Stoke Newington', in The Environs of London: Volume 3, County of Middlesex (London, 1795), pp. 280–305 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/london-environs/vol3/pp280-305. Retrieved 17 December 2015
  8. Board of Guardian Records,1834–1906 and Church of England Parish Registers,1813–1906. London Metropolitan Archives, London, at Ancestry.com.(subscription required) retrieved 27 October 2015
  9. England & Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384–1858 at Ancestry.com. (subscription required) retrieved 27 October 2015
  10. https://familysearch.org/ John Manship and Ann Dowdeswell, 12 May 1748 Saint Christopher le Stocks, London, England FHL microfilm Q942.1 L1 V26CH. Retrieved 27 October 2015
  11. England & Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384–1858 Ancestry.com. (subscription required) database on-line. Provo, UT, USA: retrieved 27 October 2015
  12. www.rubylane.com http://www.rubylane.com/. Retrieved 27 October 2015. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
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