- George Hibbert
George Hibbert (
13 January 1757 –8 October 1837 ) was an eminent English merchant,politician ,slave - andship -owner, amateurbotanist and book collector. WithRobert Milligan , he was also one of the principals of theWest India Dock Company which instigated the construction of theWest India Docks onLondon 'sIsle of Dogs in 1800. He also helped found theRoyal National Lifeboat Institution in 1824.Family background
Like Milligan, Hibbert came from families made rich from cultivating
sugar plantations in theWest Indies . The Hibbert estates were in Agualta Vale,Jamaica , and Hibbert became Agent for the island in Great Britain [ [http://www.jamaicanfamilysearch.com/Samples2/Mslavea4.htm Colonial Papers 1816 - 1831 Slave Code F ] ] , eventually retiring from the post in 1831.He was the first chairman of the
West India Dock Company which promoted the construction of theWest India Docks from 1800 to 1802, and wasMember of Parliament (MP) for Seaford from 31 October 1806 until 5 October 1812. [ [http://www.angeltowns.com/town/peerage/scommons2.htm Leigh Rayment's Peerage pages: constituencies beginning with "S"] ]Book collector
He lived for some years London, dividing his time between a house in
Portland Place and another inClapham in south-west London, where he accumulated a considerable collection of books, including Gutenberg's Bible on paper (now atNew York ), the 1459 Psalter on vellum (now atThe Hague ) and the Complutensian polyglot, also on vellum (now at Chantilly). When he moved from London in 1829, his book collection was sold at auction raising the then princely sum of £23,000. [A Catalogue of the Library of George Hibbert, Esq. of Portland Place; London: W. Nicol, 1829. see http://www.polybiblio.com/jahill/HillBibl-Selections92.0.html]Botanist
Perhaps due to his planting interests in Jamaica, Hibbert became interested in
gardening andbotany . According to JCL Loudon's 1835 "Encyclopedia of Gardening": 'The collection of heaths,Banksia s, and other Cape and Botany Bay plants, in Hibbert's garden, was most extensive, and his flower-garden one of the best round the metropolis." [http://www.gardenvisit.com/garden-designer/world-garden-design/636georgehibbertbotanicalgarden.htm] .Hibbert funded various botanical expeditions, notably that of
James Niven , an avid gardener and collector of plants, who was sent to the Cape region ofSouth Africa in 1798. He remained for five years, sending home a ‘valuable herbarium of native specimens’ and new plants, including five new species ofprotea s – Hibbert’s passion [ [http://www.tobymusgrave.com/pdf/Out_of_Africa.pdf i history of SA planthunting ] ] . Niven collected seeds of "Nivenia corymbosa" which were sent back and grown at Hibbert's Clapham estate in London. [ [http://www.plantzafrica.com/plantnop/nivencorym.htm Nivenia corymbosa ] ] . Hibbert's gardener, Joseph Knight, was reputedly one of the first people to propagateProteaceae in England [ [http://asgap.org.au/APOL25/mar02-14.html Short Cuts ] ] , and thegenus 'Hibbertia ' is named after him [ [http://www.anbg.gov.au/gnp/gnp10/hibbertia-empetrifolia.html Hibbertia empetrifolia - Growing Native Plants ] ] . Hibbert was also one of the first people to growHosta s in Europe. [ [http://myhostas.net/db/view/%3Ci%3Eventricosa%3C/i%3E MyHostas Database: Info about Hosta ventricosa ] ]Hibbert Gate
The Hibbert gate, situated at the western end of the West India Docks, was commissioned by Canary Wharf Group plc, and is a replica of the original gate that stood at the visitors' entrance to the West India Docks. The original 1803 gate was called the “Main Gate”, but became known as the “Hibbert Gate” after the model of the ship that stood on top of it. The "George Hibbert" was a
barque built in London in 1804 [ [http://www.reach.net/~sc001198/ShipsG.htm ShipsG ] ] , used to import sugar, rum, cotton, coffee, and tropical hardwoods from the West Indies and later, c.1834 [ [http://home.overflow.net.au/~vicval/shipsA-I.htm Our Ships A-I ] ] [http://www.uow.edu.au/commerce/accy/staff/andrewwfolder/William%20Foster.pdf] , used to transport convicts to Australia). The archway of the original gate, which had a pair of tall wrought-iron gates, was large enough to admit carts and wagons onto the quays. It became an emblem of the West India Docks and formed part of the arms of theMetropolitan Borough of Poplar . Hibbert Gate and its flanking walls were dismantled in 1932 as its narrow archway impeded traffic. [http://www.visiteastlondon.co.uk/downloads/Leaflets/history.pdf]RNLI
As a shipowner and chairman of the West Indies Merchants, Hibbert associated with philanthropist Sir
William Hillary and Thomas Wilson, Liberal MP for Southwark, to help found the "National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck" - an institution better known today as theRoyal National Lifeboat Institution - on 4 March 1824. [http://www.athelstane.co.uk/ballanty/lifeboat/lboat23.htm] [ [http://www.douglaslifeboat.iofm.net/Sir_William_Hillary.htm Sir William Hillary ] ]Hibbert's portrait was painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence in 1812 and by
John Hoppner (c.1800).Notes and references
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