Carl Ferdinand Henry Bolckow: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
After this the censuses record him as a landed proprietor | After this the censuses record him as a landed proprietor | ||
1881 Carl F.H. Bolckow 46, lived in Marton in Middlesbrough, with Margaret Bolckow 41, Harriett M.W. Bolckow 16, Margaret C.S. Bolckow 11, [[Charles Frederick Henry Bolckow |Charles F.H. Bolckow]] 6, Mary Chambers 66, Mother in Law<ref>1881 census</ref> | |||
1892 Downey and Co collapsed; Bolckow was bankrupted<ref>The London Gazette 15 August 1893</ref>; he also gave up the chairmanship of Bolckow, Vaughan<ref>The Times, Mar 29, 1892</ref> | 1892 Downey and Co collapsed; Bolckow was bankrupted<ref>The London Gazette 15 August 1893</ref>; he also gave up the chairmanship of Bolckow, Vaughan<ref>The Times, Mar 29, 1892</ref> |
Latest revision as of 17:41, 2 March 2025
Carl Ferdinand Henry Bolckow (c1835-1915)
c.1835 Born in Prussia[1]
1871 Iron master, living in Stokesley, Yorkshire[2]
1872 Entered into partnership with Alfred Christian Downey with the style of Downey and Co., and erected the Coatham Blast Furnaces.
1878 Inherited his uncle's wealth (Henry Bolckow), which he was instructed to invest in land
1878 Chairman of Bolckow, Vaughan and Co[3]
1879 Living at Middlesbrough. Naturalised as a British citizen[4]
After this the censuses record him as a landed proprietor
1881 Carl F.H. Bolckow 46, lived in Marton in Middlesbrough, with Margaret Bolckow 41, Harriett M.W. Bolckow 16, Margaret C.S. Bolckow 11, Charles F.H. Bolckow 6, Mary Chambers 66, Mother in Law[5]
1892 Downey and Co collapsed; Bolckow was bankrupted[6]; he also gave up the chairmanship of Bolckow, Vaughan[7]
1915 Died in Torquay[8]