Frederick Huth Jackson

British banker From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Frederick Huth Jackson PC (1863–1921), was a British banker, and a partner of the merchant bank, Frederick Huth & Co, founded by his great-grandfather, Frederick Huth.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...
Frederick Huth Jackson
Born1863
Died1921 (aged 5758)
NationalityBritish
EducationHarrow School
Balliol College, Oxford
OccupationBanker
TitlePartner, Frederick Huth & Co
SpouseClaire Annabel Caroline Grant Duff
Children4, including Anne Fremantle
Parent(s)Thomas Hughes Jackson
Hermine Meinertzhagen
RelativesSir William Jackson, 1st Baronet (grandfather)
Sir Henry Jackson, 2nd Baronet (uncle)
Frederick Huth (great-grandfather)
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Early life

He was the son of Thomas Hughes Jackson (1834–1930) and Hermine Meinertzhagen (1838–1897), and the grandson of Sir William Jackson, 1st Baronet. He was educated at Harrow School, and Balliol College, Oxford.[1]

Career

He was a partner of the private bank, Frederick Huth & Co.

From 1918 to 1919, the Rt. Hon. Frederick Huth Jackson, of 64 Rutland Gate, SW was the High Sheriff of the County of London.[2]

Following the death of Jackson in 1921, Frederick Huth & Co was in an increasingly parlous state, and the Governor of the Bank of England pushed for it to be amalgamated with Konig Brothers, which duly happened in 1923.[3]

Personal life

Thumb
Mrs. Huth Jackson, John Singer Sargent, oil on canvas, 1907.

In 1894, he married the poet and author Claire Annabel Caroline Grant Duff, the eldest daughter of Sir Mountstuart Grant Duff and Anna Julia Webster.

They had four children (all Huth Jackson):

  • Frederick, who married Helen Vinogradoff, daughter of the historian Sir Paul Vinogradoff
  • Konradin, who married Sir Arthur Hobhouse
  • Anne Marie, who became a writer. She married Christopher Evelyn Fremantle and settled in the US
  • Claire Annabel, who married Louis de Loriol and settled in France

Legacy

John Singer Sargent painted a portrait of his wife, Mrs. Huth Jackson (née Annabel Grant Duff).[4]

Arms

Coat of arms of Frederick Huth Jackson
Motto
Fortiter Fideliter Feliciter [5]

References

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