Walter Gilbey

Sir Walter Gilbey, 1st Baronet, DL (2 May 1831 – 12 November 1914) was an English wine-merchant and philanthropist.

"Cart horses". Caricature by Spy published in Vanity Fair in 1888.

Early life

Gilbey was born at Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire to parents Henry and Elizabeth. His father, the owner (and frequently driver) of the daily coach between Bishop's Stortford and London, died when he was eleven years old. Walter was shortly placed in the office of an estate agent at Tring, subsequently obtaining a clerkship in a firm of parliamentary agents in London.[1]

On the outbreak of the Crimean War, Walter and his younger brother Alfred volunteered for civilian service at the front, and were employed at a convalescent hospital on the Dardanelles. Returning to London on the declaration of peace, the pair took the advice of their eldest brother Henry, a wholesale wine-merchant, and started in the retail wine and spirits trade.[1] This included the local London style gin.

Imported wine business

The heavy duty then levied by the British government on French, Portuguese and Spanish wines made them too costly for English middle classes, and especially lower middle classes, which could only afford beer. Henry Gilbey believed these classes would gladly drink wine if they could get it at a moderate price. On his advice Walter and Alfred determined to push the sales of colonial, and particularly of Cape, wines, on which the duty was comparatively light. Financially backed by Henry, they opened a small retail business in a basement in Oxford Street, London, in 1857.[1]

Growth and distribution

The Cape wines proved popular, and within three years the brothers had 20,000 customers on their books. The creation of the off-licence system by William Ewart Gladstone, then Chancellor of the Exchequer, in 1860, followed by the large reduction in the duty on French wines effected by the commercial treaty between England and France in 1861, revolutionized their trade and laid the foundation of their fortunes.[1]

Three provincial grocers, who had been granted the new off-licence, applied to be appointed the Gilbeys agents in their respective districts, and many similar applications followed. These were granted, and before very long a leading local grocer was acting as the firm's agents in every district in England.[1]

The grocer who dealt in the Gilbeys' wines and spirits was not allowed to sell those of any other firm, and the Gilbeys in return handed over to him all their existing customers in his district. This arrangement was of mutual advantage, and the Gilbeys' business increased so rapidly that, in 1864, Henry Gilbey abandoned his own undertaking to join his brothers. In 1867 the three brothers secured the old Pantheon theatre and concert hall in Oxford Street for their headquarters. In 1875, the firm purchased a large claret-producing estate in Medoc, on the banks of the Gironde, and became also the proprietors of two large whisky-distilleries in Scotland. In 1893 the business was converted, for family reasons, into a private limited liability company, of which Walter Gilbey, who in the same year was created a baronet, was chairman.[1]

Horse breeding and agriculture

Sir Walter Gilbey also became well known as a breeder of shire horses, and he did much to improve the breed of English horses (other than race-horses) generally, and wrote extensively on the subject,[1] including the encyclopedic Animal Painters of England From the Year 1650: A brief history of their lives and works.[2] He became president of the Shire Horse Society, of the Hackney Horse Society, and of the Hunters' Improvement Society, and he was the founder and chairman of the London Cart Horse Parade Society. He was also a practical agriculturist, and president of the Royal Agricultural Society.[1] He was appointed a deputy lieutenant of Essex in 1906.[3]

Selected works

gollark: I mean, school somewhat bad, but not studying any maths and whatever also bad.
gollark: People are fine at a few "physics" things they encounter frequently and *have* to know, but don't know general mechanisms and are bad at modelling other situations.
gollark: This actually works even for people who have studied physics a bit who get a question without convenient numbers; they fall back to Aristotlean mechanics a lot of the time.
gollark: People doing physics intuitively are *really bad* at it.
gollark: I don't agree.

See also

  • SodaStream the water-carbonating apparatus devised by a family member in 1903

References

  1.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Gilbey, Sir Walter, 1st Bart.". Encyclopædia Britannica. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 11–12.
  2. Sir Walter Gilbey, Animal Painters of England From the Year 1650: A brief history of their lives and works, London: Vinton & Co., 1900. At Archive.org Accessed 13 February 2009
  3. "No. 27924". The London Gazette. 22 June 1906. p. 4307.
  4. Sir Walter Gilbey, George Morland: His life and works, London: Adam and Charles Black, 1907. At Archive.org Accessed 18 September 2014
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New title Baronet
(of Elsenham Hall)
1893–1914
Succeeded by
Henry Walter Gilbey

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.