Ellis Arthur Franklin

Ellis Arthur Franklin OBE (1894–1964) was an English merchant banker.

Franklin was born in Kensington, London [1] into an affluent Anglo-Jewish family, and married Muriel Frances Waley (1894–1976); their daughter was Rosalind Franklin, one of five children.

He was a banker at Keyser's Bank, where his father was a senior partner. His uncle was Herbert Samuel, Home Secretary (1916), and the first High Commissioner for the British Mandate of Palestine. His siblings included Helen Caroline Franklin, wife to Norman de Mattos Bentwich, Attorney General in the British Mandate of Palestine, active in trade union organisation, Women's Suffrage, and the London County Council on which she was a member, and Hugh Franklin, a militant suffragist and penal reform activist.

Franklin became a teacher of a class in Electricity at The Working Men’s College in 1919, having been introduced to the College by his uncle, the banker Lionel Jacob.[2] By 1922 he had become Vice Principal of the College and was instrumental in attracting donations to the College from the City, and new College Corporation members from the Home Office, The Bar, and the City.

Franklin had a strong social conscience. He also helped Jewish refugees fleeing from the Continent, some being taken into the family home.

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