Augustine Heard
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Augustine Heard (March 30, 1785 - September 14, 1868) was an American entrepreneur, businessman and trader, and founder of the Augustine Heard & Co. firm in China.
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[edit] Early Career
Augustine Heard was born in a wealthy family of Ipswich, Massachusetts merchants. His father, John Heard (1744-1834), had made his fortune by trading with the West Indies, and his half-brother Daniel (1778-1801) also worked in foreign trade with the West Indies and China. Educated at Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, Augustine did not graduate and instead, in 1803, began working for a prominent Boston, Massachusetts merchant, Ebenezer Francis. Two years later, Heard embarked as supercargo to Calcutta on one of Francis' ships. Climbing the ranks of trading companies, Heard was, by 1812, captain of his first ship, the brig Caravan. He pursued his naval career for 18 years, becoming a renowned navigator and his feats became the subject of poems and stories. [1]
[edit] China
In 1830, at the age of 45, Heard settled in Canton, China, where we became partner in the American trading firm Samuel Russell & Co. In 1834, he returned to Boston for health reasons, and managed his business from there. He also developed close ties with his nephews, the sons of his brother George Washington Heard, and developed a business relationship with them. set up his own company, Augustine Heard & Co. in 1840 with Joseph Coolidge and John Murray Forbes, friends and partners who had remained in Canton. The firm became very successful, and rapidly grew to become the third largest American firm in China.[1] Heard returned to China the following year and actively directed his firm until 1844 when he gradually started scaling down his involvement, travelling extensively to Europe and America, leaving the firm's operations in the hands of his partners and family members. [2] The firm, like many other American firms involved in trade with China, enountered financial difficulties in the 1870s and finally went bankrupt in 1875. A sister company bearing the same name established in the United States for the purpose of running operations from the U.S. side, had been created on April 13, 1861 and was dissolved on May 31, 1865. [3]
[edit] Retirement
In the late 1840s, Heard started developing his business in Ipswich, Massachusetts, and co-founded with his brother and brother-in-law the Ipswich Manufactoring Company in 1848, of which he became sole proprietor in 1852. Heard remained in Ipswich, where he founded the Ipswich Public Library[4], until his death following a short illness in 1868.[5]
[edit] Family
Augustine Heard largely entrusted control over Augustine Heard & Co. to members of his family. Among his family members who were involved in running the firm were his nephews Albert Farley, George Farley, namesake Augustine and John, with whom he had returned to China with in 1844.[2][6] Nephew Augustine later became U.S. Minister to Korea.
[edit] References
- ^ a b Genealogy Find: The Exploits of Captain Augustine Heard. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
- ^ a b Ipswich Historical Society and Museum: Augustine Head. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
- ^ U.S. Supreme Court WILLIAMS v. HEARD, 140 U.S. 529 (1891). Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
- ^ Art Works in the Ipswich Public Library. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
- ^ Services at the Funeral of Augustine Heard, at the Church of the First Parish, Ipswich, Mass. September 16, 1868.. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
- ^ Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.