Charles Alexander Tomes
American merchant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American merchant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Alexander Tomes (October 25, 1854 – July 28, 1933)[1] was an American merchant in the Far East in the employment of Shewan, Tomes & Co.
Charles Alexander Tomes | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, U.S. | October 25, 1854
Died | July 28, 1933 78) Lossiemouth, Scotland | (aged
Alma mater | Harvard University |
Spouse |
Harriot Constance Budd Hancock
(after 1890) |
Children | 5 |
Relatives |
|
C. A. Tomes was born on October 25, 1854, in New York City. He was the eldest son of Eleanor Tomes (née Hadden) (1820–1894),[2] and Francis Tomes Jr. (1813–1898),[3] who was a prominent merchant who owned until 1877 a large Victorian mansion, on Putnam Avenue in Greenwich, Connecticut, that had been designed by Calvert Vaux with a landscape design by Frederick Law Olmsted.[4]
His paternal grandparents were Maria (née Roberts) Tome, and Francis Tomes Sr., who was born in Chipping Campden, England. His uncle was Robert Tomes, a physician and diplomat.[4] His maternal grandparents were Ann (née Aspinwall) Hadden and David Hadden, a prosperous Scottish born merchant who lived in New York for most of his life.[5][6]
He attended St. John's School in Sing Sing, New York, and, subsequently, Harvard University, from which he graduated in 1871.[7]
Tomes' father ran the family's importing business, Francis Tomes & Co., which his grandfather had started in 1815 and managed until the 1940s.[4] He was admitted to his father's firm at 6 Maiden Lane in New York in October 1877. During the economic crash of the 1870s, the business, which had thrived through the U.S. Civil War, went bankrupt.[8] Between 1887 and 1888, he made a trip around the world,[7] before moving to Shanghai, and later Hong Kong, with a letter of recommendation from John Murray Forbes.[4]
In 1879, he began working for Russell & Company in Hong Kong, then one of the largest mercantile firms in the Far East. In 1885, he was admitted as a partner. Russell & Company went out of business in 1891 bankrupt in 1892.[9] Tomes and Robert Shewan, both former employees of Russell and Company, acquired the remains of the operation and changed its name to Shewan, Tomes & Co., of which Tomes became Tai-pan, in 1895.[10]
In 1901, Shewan, Tomes & Co. contributed to the foundation of helped the China Light and Power Company,[10] and a new steamship company between the U.S. and China, Japan, and the Philippines known as the Pan-American Steamship Company.[11]
On March 20, 1890, married Harriot Constance Budd Hancock, at St. John's Cathedral in Hong Kong.[12] She was the daughter of Alfred Hancock of Scotland and Harriot Elizabeth Rider, née Budd.[5] The couple lived at "Gough Hill" on Victoria Peak in Hong Kong, and in New York City, at 993 Park Avenue, which was built by Bing & Bing. They were the parents of five children, including:[5]
Tomes was a member of the Harvard Club and the University Club.[1]
Tomes died on July 28, 1933, in Lossiemouth, Scotland.[1] After his death, several of his items were acquired by the Peabody Museum in Salem, Massachusetts.
Tomes was a grandfather of Edward Baldwin, 4th Earl Baldwin of Bewdley (1938–2021), who was one of the ninety elected hereditary peers who remained after the passing of the House of Lords Act 1999.
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