Online Encyclopedia

JOSHUA BATES (1788-1864)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 510 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOSHUA BATES (1788-1864)  ,
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American financier, was born in
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Weymouth, Massachusetts, on the loth of
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October 1788, of an old Massachusetts
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family prominent in colonial affairs . After several winters' schooling in his native
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town, he entered the counting-house of William Gray & Son in Boston . In 1809 he began business on his own account, but failed during the War of 1812 and again became associated with the Grays, then the largest shipowners in
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America, by whom a few years later he was sent to
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London in charge of their
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European business . There he came into relations with the Barings, and in 1826 formed a partnership with John, a son of
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Sir Thomas
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Baring . Two years later both partners were admitted to the
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firm of Baring Brothers &
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Company, of which Bates eventually became senior partner, occupying in consequence an influential position in the
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British
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financial
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world . In 1853-1854 he acted with rare impartiality and justice as
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umpire of the international commission appointed to settle claims growing out of the War of 1812 . In 1852-1855 he contributed $1oo,000 in books and in
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cash for, a public library in Boston, the
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money to be invested and the
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annual income to be applied to the
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purchase of books . Upon his
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death the " upper hall," or main reference-
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room (opened in 1861) in the
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building erected in 1858 by the order of the library trustees, was named Bates Hall; and upon the opening of the new building in 1895 this name was transferred to its
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principal
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reading-room, one of the finest library halls in the world . During the
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Civil War Bates's sympathies were strongly with the Union, and besides aiding the
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United States government fiscal agents in various ways, he used his influence to prevent the raising of loans for the Confederacy . He died in London on the 24th of September 1864 . See Memorial of Joshua Bates (Boston, 1865) .

End of Article: JOSHUA BATES (1788-1864)
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WILLIAM BATES (1625-1699)

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