Edward Ellice the Elder (27 September 1783 – 17 September 1863), known in his time as the "Bear", was an English merchant and politician. He was a Director of the Hudson's Bay Company and a prime mover behind the Reform Bill of 1832.
Biography
Ellice was born on 27 September 1783 in London, the son of Alexander Ellice and Ann Russell. In 1795, his father purchased the Seigneury of Villechauve in Canada from Michel Chartier de Lotbinière, Marquis de Lotbinière. His younger brother was General Robert Ellice.
He was educated at Winchester School and at Marischal College, Aberdeen. He became a partner in the firm of Phyn, Ellices and Inglis, which had become interested in the XY Company in Canada. He was sent to Canada in 1803, and in 1804 became a party to the union of the XY and North West Companies. He became a partner in the North West Company, and during the struggle with Lord Selkirk he played an important part.
He engaged in the Canada fur trade from 1803, and as a result was nicknamed "the Bear". On 30 October 1809 he married Hannah Althea Bettesworth, née Grey, daughter of Charles Grey, 1st Earl Grey, and the widow of Captain George Edmund Byron Bettesworth. He had one son by her, Edward.
In 1820, he was, with the brothers William and Simon McGillivray, active in bringing about the union of the North West and the Hudson's Bay Companies; and it was actually with him and the McGillivrays that the union was negotiated. He amalgamated the North West, XY, and Hudson's Bay companies in 1821.
In 1825 Ellice was a director of the New Zealand Company, a venture chaired by his brother-in-law, the wealthy John George Lambton, Whig MP (and later 1st Earl of Durham), that made the first attempt to colonise New Zealand. His brother Russell Ellice was also a director.[1][2][3]
He was Member of Parliament for Coventry from 1818 to 1826, and again from 1830 to 1863.[4] He served as a Secretary to the Treasury, and a whip in Lord Grey's government, 1830–1832. He was Secretary at War from 1832 to 1834, during which time he proposed that appointments in the army should be made directly from his office. He founded the Reform Club in 1836 and supported Palmerston as premier. He was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1833.
He was awarded a DCL by St Andrews University. He privately urged French government to send troops into Spain in 1836. He was deputy-governor of the Hudson's Bay Company.
Ellice was a co-owner of eight sugar estates in Grenada, British Guiana, Tobago and Antigua. In the 1830s, the British government emancipated the slaves, and Ellice received compensation to the tune of about £35,000 for the liberation of over 300 slaves.[5]
In 1843, he married, secondly, Anne Amelia Leicester, née Keppel, daughter of William Keppel, 4th Earl of Albemarle and widow of Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester. She died in the following year. His only son was Edward Ellice Jr., who also sat in Parliament.
His brother General Robert Ellice married Eliza Courtney; one of their grandsons became his son's heir in 1880.
Sporting interests
On returning from Canada in 1839, Ellice bought the estate of Glenquoich in Lochaber, and built a lodge on the shores of Loch Quoich designed by Inverness architect Alexander Ross. In the summer and autumn months he entertained a wide range of guests there, including artists, writers, statesmen and diplomats.
In the 1840s Ellice was also a shooting tenant on Sir George Macpherson Grant's Invereshie estate in Badenoch. Over a seven year period his sporting yields there were 14,560 grouse, 810 ptarmigan and 146 blackcock, plus woodcock, partridge, teal, snipe and mountain hares. He shot 34 deer at Invereshie between 1834 and 1839. His sporting activities provoked complaints from the estate's farming tenants and Macpherson Grant regarded him as a problem tenant.[6]
Legacy
The Ellice Islands, formerly part of the colony of Gilbert and Ellice Islands and now the independent nation of Tuvalu, were named after him. The Rural Municipality of Ellice in Manitoba, Fort Ellice, and Ellice Avenue in Winnipeg[7] are named after him.
See also
References
- ^ Adams, Peter (2013). Fatal Necessity: British Intervention in New Zealand, 1830–1847. BWB e-Book. Bridget Williams Books. p. 197. ISBN 978-1-927277-19-5. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
...first published in 1977.
- ^ McDonnell, Hilda (2002). "Chapter 3: The New Zealand Company of 1825". The Rosanna Settlers: with Captain Herd on the coast of New Zealand 1826-7. Archived from the original on 28 February 2009. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
including Thomas Shepherd's Journal and his coastal views, The NZ Company of 1825.
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ignored (help) - ^ Wakefield, Edward Jerningham (1845). Adventure in New Zealand, from 1839 to 1844: With Some Account of the Beginning of the British Colonization of the Islands. John Murray. p. 4. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
Digitised 22 July 2009
- ^ Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs
- ^ "Summary of Individual | Legacies of British Slavery".
- ^ Taylor, David (2022), The People Are not There: The Transformation of Badenoch 1800 - 1863, John Donald, Edinburgh, pp. 104, 105 & 108, ISBN 9781910900987
- ^ History in Winnipeg Street Names at the Manitoba Historical Society
Bibliography
- W. Stewart Wallace, ed. (1948). The Encyclopedia of Canada, vol. II. Toronto: University Associates of Canada. pp. 287–288.
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(help) - Colthart, James M. (1976). "Edward Ellice". Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. IX. Toronto. ISBN 0-8020-3319-9.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Watkin, Edward William. Canada and the States. Forgotten Books. ISBN 1-60620-892-6.
- "Archival material relating to Edward Ellice". UK National Archives.
- "Our History: Acquisitions". Hudson's Bay Company. Retrieved 12 April 2009.