Online Encyclopedia

GURNEY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 732 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GURNEY  , the name of a philanthropic

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English
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family of bankers and merchants,
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direct descendants of
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Hugh de Gournay, lord of Gotlrnay, one of the Norman noblemen who accompanied William the Conqueror to England . Large grants of
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land were made to Hugh de Gournay in Norfolk and Suffolk, and Norwich has since that time been the headquarters of the family, the majority of whom were
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Quakers . Here in 1770 the brothers John and Henry Gurney founded a banking-house, the business passing in 1779 to Henry's son, Bartlett Gurney . On the
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death of Bartlett Gurney in 18oz the
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bank became the
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property of his three cousins, of whom JOHN GURNEY (1750—18o9) was the most remarkable . One of his daughters was Elizabeth Fry; another married
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Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton . Of his sons one was JosEPH JOHN GURNEY (1788—1847), a well-known philanthropist of the day; another,
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SAMUEL GURNEY (1786—1856) assumed on his
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father's death the control of the Norwich bank . Samuel Gurney also took over about the same time the control of the
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London billbroking business of Richardson, Overend &
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Company, in which he was already a partner . This business had been founded in ',Soo by Thomas Richardson, clerk to a London
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bill-discounter, and John Overend, chief clerk in the bank of Smith, Payne & Company at Nottingham, the Gurneys supplying the capital . At that time bill-discounting was carried on in a spasmodic fashion by the ordinary merchant in addition to his
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regular business, but Richardson considered that there was
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room for a London house which should devote itself entirely to the trade in bills . This, at that time, novel idea proved an instant success . The title of the
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firm was subsequently changed to Overend, Gurney & Company, and for
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forty years it was the greatest discounting-house in the
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world . During the
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financial crisis of 1825 Overend, Gurney & Company were able to make short loans to many other bankers .

The house indeed became known as " the bankers' banker," and secured many of the previous clients of the Bank of England . Samuel Gurney died in 1856 . He was a

man of very charitable disposition, and during the latter years of his
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life charitable and philanthropic undertakings almost monopolized his attention . In 1865 the business of Overend, Gurney & Company, which had come under less competent control, was converted into a joint stock company, but in 1866 the firm suspended payment with liabilities amounting to eleven millions sterling .

End of Article: GURNEY
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EDMUND GURNEY (1847—1888)

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