Daniel James (businessman)

For other people named Daniel James, see Daniel James (disambiguation).
Daniel James

Daniel James
Born 17 April 1801
Hartford, Connecticut
Died 27 November 1876
Woolton, Liverpool.
Resting place Liverpool
Residence Clifton House at Rock Ferry; Oakwood at Aigburth; Beaconsfield at Woolton.
Nationality USA
Citizenship 31 May 1866 Naturalized British Citizen
Partner(s) Elizabeth Woodbridge Phelps, Sophia Hall Hitchcock, Ruth Lancaster Dickinson
Children

Mother Elizabeth James: Anson Green Phelps James (1829-1842); Daniel Willis James (1832-1907); Elizabeth Eggleston James (1833-1868); Olivia Phelps (James) Hoe (1837-1935); Henry Stokes James (1839 died at 3 months).

Mother Sophia Hall James: Frank Linsly James (1851-1890); John Arthur James (1853-1917); William Dodge James (1854-1912).
Parent(s) Nathaniel Emmes James and Betsey Ingersoll

Daniel James (born 1801) was one of the three founder partners of Phelps, Dodge & Co., a New York trading organisation established in 1833/4, exporting cotton to England and importing manufactured goods in return such as tin, tin plate, iron and copper. James was born in America but was to live in Liverpool for forty seven years running the British side of the business called Phelps, James & Co.[1]  The company was to dominate the export market of tinplate from the United Kingdom for three-quarters of a century at a time when Wales was the centre of world production.[2]

Early life

Daniel James (born in Hartford, Connecticut[Note 1]) was a wholesale grocer who in 1829 married Elizabeth Woodbridge Phelps (b. 1807) daughter of merchant Anson Greene Phelps (b. 1781). In 1831, Daniel moved to Liverpool with his wife to replace Anson Phelps's existing partner - Elisha Peck - who had spent fifteen years in the job and wanted to return to America.[3]

Partnership

The Phelps, Peck & Co partnership ended in 1833 when the building housing their New York warehouse collapsed. To revive the business Phelps set up the partnership with his two sons-in-law Daniel James and William Earle Dodge, Sr.- forming Phelps, Dodge & Co. in the USA and Phelps, James & Co. in England.[4]  Phelps was the senior partner in this arrangement with a two thirds interest and the remainder split between the sons-in-law.

In 1837 Phelps's daughter Caroline (b. 1812 d.1881), whose fiancé - Josiah Stokes - had been killed in the building collapse, married his brother James and he would eventually (in 1847) be the third son-in-law of Anson G Phelps to join the organisation as a partner with a 15% share. He would leave in 1878 to enter the banking business.[5]

The American side of the business was to remain in family control into the next century, although in Britain Daniel James made his assistant - Thomas Morris Banks (b 1796) - a partner in Phelps, James & Co.

When their father-in-law Phelps died in 1853, Daniel James and William Earle Dodge Sr. purchased his holdings and absorbed his son's share when he died some years later.[6]  James would continue to live in England but was said to have gone frequently to America for extended holidays and consultation with his partners.[7] 

From about 1835 Phelps, Dodge & Co. were heavily involved with selling timber extracted from lands they had purchased in Pennsylvania and it became their largest subsidiary operation. Daniel James's brother, Henry (1821-1897), joined this business in about 1842, and eventually ran the outlet operation for Phelps, Dodge from Baltimore under the company name of Henry James & Co.[8]

Life in Liverpool

Elizabeth and Daniel James gravestone, originally located in Liverpool, now in St Andrew's churchyard, West Sussex, UK. Their remains were not disturbed. (see text: "Final Resting Place")

In the first few years of business Daniel James faced difficult times in Liverpool. A recession that started in 1837 in both America and Britain brought the company to the point of ruin and lasted several years. His wife died in 1847 and his eldest son was killed in a carriage accident whilst visiting his grandfather in America.[9] Daniel remarried in 1849 to Sophia Hitchcock.[10] At this time his surviving son - Daniel Willis James - moved to America to further his education and become a member of Phelps, Dodge & Co.

Daniel and Sofia had three children: Frank Linsly (b. 1851 d.1890), John Arthur (b. 1853 d.1917) and William Dodge (b. 1854 d.1912) who all grew up and were educated in Britain. Linsly became an explorer and was killed in Africa by a wounded elephant in 1890. Both Arthur and William married into British society and lived in English country houses on the inherited wealth of their father. Arthur's main residence was Coton House near Rugby and William's was West Dean House, West Sussex.

Sophia Hall Hitchcock died in 1870 and in 1871, Daniel James married his children’s former governess Ruth Lancaster Dickinson (b. 1824-d.1907).[11] 

In 1866 Daniel James took British citizenship in order to buy the house that became his final home - Beaconsfield, Woolton, Liverpool.[12] 

Cotton Famine Relief

In 1862 the import of cotton to the UK dried up due to the blockade of the Confederate ports by the Union's navy during the civil war. This resulted in great hardship for the workers and families associated with the cotton manufacturing industry. Relief funds were set up in the northern states of America to support the UK cotton workers. Donation were made by American businesses and individuals amounting to $350,000, and this was used to purchase foodstuffs in America including flour and preserved meats. Daniel James was appointed the chairman of the Liverpool committee, responsible for receiving the shipments, offloading and distributing the food. In addition he negotiated with transport companies and government agencies to exempt charges and duties where possible in the UK.[13]

Legacy

During the recession that started in 1837, Daniel James was faced with insolvency in England whilst his partners were investing in lumber and metal manufacturing in American. He wrote to his brother-in-law that "a merchant ought not to be a manufacturer". Again in 1857 a similar situation arose and this time his son expressed concern: “The place for all the Capital we have is in the business, and not in pine lands, factories, Lackawanna R R or Iron concerns”.[14]  Daniel James was a worrier and unlike his partners did not have the inclination or temperament for risk taking. However, he was suited to be a merchant and a very good one.[15]  From 1833 to 1873 his Liverpool end of the business procured and exported over $300,000,000 worth of metal to America, he also imported and sold cotton to the mills in Lancashire.[16]  In 1859 his long term friend and business partner in Liverpool - Thomas Banks - died.[17]

New York Tribune Almanac, 1876

Phelps, James & Co. dominated the export of tinplate from the UK. In America the imported tinplate was used for manufacturing such things as roofing, tools, machinery, cans, cutlery, skillets, pots, pans, pitchers, plates, washing boards, bathtubs, etc.[18]

Daniel James would continued to run the business until his death in 1876 leaving a solid foundation from which the next generation would build, paradoxically not in mercantile. During the 1880s and beyond his son and William E Dodge Jr. developed vast copper mining enterprises in Arizona and extending railroads to meet the growing demands from an expanding USA.[19]

Two years after Daniel James died, his partner William E Dodge Sr. retired and the Stokes family left the business. On 31 December 1878 the existing Phelps, James & Co partnership officially 'expired'.[20] Charles Berjew Brooke became the representative in the UK for Phelps James & Co for the final 25 years of its existence.[21] and the business was eventually closed on 31 December 1906.[22]

Daniel James, like his partners was a religious man. He met preacher Charles Grandison Finney in New York during the 1830s when Daniel's father-in-law - Anson G Phelps - had rented and later purchased church buildings for him.[23] Finney records in his memoirs that when he visited England in 1857 he stayed with Daniel James in Liverpool.[24][25] Legacies in Daniel James's will included sums for the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions and London Missionary Society.

Final Resting Place

Gravestone of Elizabeth Eccleston James and Sophia (Hitchcock) James, St Andrew's churchyard, West Dean, West Sussex, UK. The stone was removed from Liverpool Necropolis - their remains were not disturbed (see text).

Just as Daniel James became successful he lost his first wife Elizabeth. She had not enjoyed the best of health and died in 1847. She was buried in the Liverpool Necropolis, a cemetery built on the outskirts of the expanding and overcrowded city. Daniel remarried in 1849 to Sophia Hitchcock and when she died in 1870 she was also buried in the Necropolis. Daniel married for a third time at the age of 70 to his children’s former governess. However, she would have know that he still deeply loved his first wife Elizabeth as he chose to be buried with her, and when he died in 1876 his wish was granted.

By 1890, the sheer number of burials in the Necropolis had created unsanitary conditions in the surrounding area. The council took control of the site and over a period of several years turned it into a park. The bodies of those buried there were not exhumed but the gravestones and memorials were removed. It was at this time that Daniel’s son from his second marriage – William Dodge James - arranged for the gravestones to be transferred to the church (St Andrew's) just behind his house in West Dean, where they remain today. At the foot of Daniel and Elizabeth's stone is that of Daniel's second wife Sofia, and daughter from his first marriage - Elizabeth Eccleston James.[26]

See also

Notes

  1. Other sources refer to Truxton, Connecticut.

References

  1. Cleland, p. 17.
  2. Brooke, Edward Henry (1944). Chronology of the Tin Plate Works of Great Britain. Cardiff: William Lewis. pp. Introduction.
  3. Dodge, p. 109.
  4. Cleland, pp. 15-17.
  5. Dodge, pp. 62-63.
  6. Cleland, p. 36.
  7. Dodge, p. 106.
  8. Cleland, p. 49.
  9. Dodge, pp. 104-108.
  10. Mrs Edward, Hitchcock. "Genealogy of The Hitchcock Familly" (PDF). Page 29. Privately. Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  11. Stokes, Anson Phelps (1910). Stoke Records Volume 1 Part 2. New York: Printed Privately. p. 181.
  12. Stokes, Anson Phelps (1915). Stoke Records Volume III. New York: Printed Privately. p. 127.
  13. Report of the American International Relief Committee for the Suffering Operatives of Great Britain, 1862–'63. C.A. Alvord. 1864.
  14. Dodge, p. 135.
  15. Lowitt, p. 98.
  16. Lowitt, p. 64.
  17. The London Gazette. 10 January 1860. p. 94.
  18. Cleland, p. 23.
  19. Dodge, pp. 129-150.
  20. The London Gazette. 17 January 1879. p. 242.
  21. Brooke, Edward Henry (1944). Chronology of the Tin Plate Works of Great Britain. Cardiff: William Lewis. pp. Introduction.
  22. The London Gazette. 1 January 1907. p. 70.
  23. Rosell/Dupuis, Garth/Richard (1989). The Original Memoirs of Charles G Finney. Michigan: Zondervan. pp. Chapter XX Revivals in Columbia and New York City.
  24. Finney, Charles. "Letter of Charles G Finney". Footnote. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  25. Rosell/Dupuis, Garth/Richard (1989). The Original Memoirs of Charles G Finney. Michigan: Zondervan. pp. Chapter XXXIV Labors in England till 1860.
  26. Robbens, Ted. DeGrazia, Laura Murphy. (January 2013). The Tombstone of Daniel and Elizabeth Woodbridge (Phelps) James of New York and Liverpool. The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record. p. 45.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.