- Daniel Beale
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Daniel Beale (1759–1842) was a Scottish merchant and fur trader active in the Far East mercantile centres of Bombay, Canton and Macau as well as at one time the Prussian consul in China.
Contents
Biography
Nothing is known of Beale until his arrival in the Far East in the closing decades of the eighteenth century. Giving evidence before the British parliament’s commons committee of Enquiry on the East India Company’s Affairs on 11 May 1815, Beale testified that he had been resident in Canton “from the latter end of 1787 to the middle of 1797”[1] and acted as “agent for many of the mercantile houses in Bombay and Bengal. He later became a partner of John Henry Cox whose father James had dispatched him to Canton in 1872 to sell off an accumulated stock of clocks, watches and mechanical toys [2] known in Pidgin English as “singsongs”, which were popular with the Chinese. Along with James Fox, the other major manufacturer of singsongs was Francis Magniac of Clerkenwell, London, whose son's Charles and Hollingworth would later become partners of Beale.[3]
Merchants operating in the Far East at this time formed a bewildering array of partnerships. As well as the Coxes, Beale was also at various times a partner of John Reid, Charles Magniac and his brother Hollingworth, as well as Alexander Shank and Robert Hamilton.[4]
On the 15 February 1786, a Prussian ship arrived at Whampoa whereupon the East India Company’s agent at Canton informed the Committee of Supercargoes that Beale had shown him a letter signed by “Count Lusi, Envoy Extraordinaire to his Majesty the King of Prussia with the King of Great Britain and his Colonel of Infantry”, announcing his appointment as his Prussian Majesty’s Consul in China.[5]
Beale was also a member of the Associated Merchants Trading to the Northwest Coast of America, which owned the snow Iphigenia Nubiana, trading on this coast in 1788 and 1789. Other partners in the venture were John Meares, John Henry Cox, Richard C. Etches, John W. Etches, William Fitzhugh and Henry Land.[6] Along with fellow Scotsman John Reid, Beale was also one of the owners of the Imperial Eagle, a vessel ostensibly belonging to the fictitious Austrian East India Company, which sailed under the flag of Austria. This allowed her to circumvent the trade monopoly then held by the East India Company. Beale was by this time the Prussian agent in Canton following his earlier appointment as consul.
By 1797, Beale and Co. had become the biggest of the country traders, dealing with clients in Bombay, Calcutta and London, in Indian cotton, sandalwood, tin, pepper Chinese tea and silk as well as opium.[7] His firm Beale & Co. seems to have been active in the opium trade between 1783–1793.
In 1797 Daniel Beale left China to join Magniac & Co. in London and in 1800 the sole British firm in Canton is recorded as Reid, Beale & Co., formerly Hamilton & Reid, and in 1804 to become Beale & Magniac.[3]
Records show that between 1804 and 1806, Beale was in correspondence with William Jardine,[8] as a result of Magniac and Co, acting as London agents for Jardine, Matheson & Co..
Memorial
Beale died in England in 1842. In the gallery of St Pancras New Church, London, there is a memorial to Thomas Beale of Fitzroy Square and of Millfield House Edmonton, Middlesex. formerly of Canton and Macao, "a most zealous promoter of the building of this Church and one of the original trustees.”[9]
He was immortalised by the artist Jacques-Laurent Agasse in his painting Daniel Beale at his Farm at Edmonton with his Favourite Horse.[10]
Family
Beale had a son, also named Daniel, who was born about 1798 and died on 4 January 1827 aged 29 as well as a younger brother, Thomas Beale, and a cousin called Thomas Chaye Beale.[11] In 1791 he married Elizabeth daughter of Paul Barbot of London.[10] She died in 1830.[9]
References
- ^ The parliamentary debates from the year 1803 to the present time. Online version at Google Books.
- ^ Ride, Lindsay; Ride, May; Mellor, Bernard (ed.) (1996). An East India company cemetery: Protestant burials in Macao. Hong Kong Univ Press. ISBN 978-9622093843. Online version at Google books p. 13
- ^ a b Greenberg, Michael. British trade and the opening of China 1800-1842. Monthly Review Press; First Edition edition (January 1, 1951). ISBN 978-0853454977. Online version at Google Books
- ^ Matheson Connell, Carol (2004). A Business in Risk – Jardine Matheson and the Hong Kong Trading Industry. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-27598-035-1. p. 7 Online version at Google books
- ^ ’’The Gentleman's Magazine’’ (1798) Volume 58, Page 555 Online version at Google Books
- ^ Dalzell , Kathleen ‘’Queen Charlotte Islands - Book 2: of places and names’’ Prince Rupert: Cove Press, 1973.
- ^ Coates, Austin. Macao and the British, 1637-1842. China; OUP. ISBN 978-0195827828. p. 73, pp. 128ff
- ^ "Jardine Matheson Archive". http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0012%2FMS%20JM%2FMS.JM%2FC10%2F2. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
- ^ a b Survey of London: volume 24: The parish of St Pancras part 4: King’s Cross Neighbourhood (1952), pp. 1–9.
- ^ a b "Sotheby’s Auction Item". 2005. http://www.invaluable.com/auction-lot/f-jacques-laurent-agasse-1767-1849-1-c-860tjei64d. Retrieved June 2, 2011.
- ^ "Old Protestant Cemetery in Macau". http://gwulo.com/sites/gwulo.com/files/Gwulo-Macau-Old-Protestant-Cemetery.pdf. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
Categories:- Scottish businesspeople
- History of foreign trade in China
- 1759 births
- 1842 deaths
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