Sir William Bensley, 1st Baronet

Sir William Bensley, 1st Baronet (1737 – 17 December 1809) was an English director of the East India Company.

Monument in Bletchingley Church to Sir William Bensley and his wife Mary, by John Bacon

Life

He was the son of Thomas Bensley, and his wife Elizabeth Winter, daughter of William Winter, both of Norfolk.[1]

Bensley was made lieutenant in the Royal Navy in 1757.[2] At the end of the Seven Years' War he was put on half-pay, and in 1764 he went to the Bengal Presidency as an East Company employee, remaining with the Company until 1777.[3] Robert Clive recommended him for a writership, and he was given the position in 1766. He became an agent for Richard Barwell, and retained that connection when he returned to England. Judged honest by Barwell, he made money as station custom master, according to Philip Francis.[4]

Back in England, Bensley associated with "nabobs" such as Francis Sykes and Richard Becher (died 1782), and was a supporter of Warren Hastings as a potential reformer.[4] In 1781 he was elected a director of the East India Company.[5] The East India Bill of 1783 and trial of Warren Hastings starting in 1785 drew him closer into the group around Hastings, such as John Sullivan.[4] With Francis Baring and Hugh Inglis, he backed John Shore for a Council seat in Bengal in 1786.[6] At one point at odds with Henry Dundas, he had reached an accommodation by 1789.[4]

Bensley was created baronet of St Marylebone in the County of Middlesex on 24 June 1801.[7][2] In 1805 he leased 53 Berners Street in London.[8] He had previously lived on the same Berners Street estate, sharing with a friend, John Routledge (died 1798).[9] When the impoverished Nathaniel Brassey Halhed was given an East India Company post in 1809, it was through Bensley's patronage.[10][11]

Bensley died on 17 December 1809, and the baronetcy became extinct.[12]

The Indiaman Sir William Bensley was launched at Ipswich in 1802.[13] By 1816 it had become a transport ship for convicts.[14]

Family

Bensley married, on 12 June 1798, Mary Biscoe, daughter of Vincent John Biscoe (died 1770), a West Indian merchant and his first wife Lady Mary Seymour, daughter of Edward Seymour, 8th Duke of Somerset.[15][16]

Mary Biscoe, who died in 1830, had before her marriage supported the aged Rev. James Hutton (1715–1795).[17] She was a friend of Stephana Law, daughter of John Law the Archdeacon of Rochester, and brought about Stephana's marriage in 1799 to her brother Joseph Seymour Biscoe as his second wife.[18] The first marriage, to Susanna Harriot Hope, had ended after a high-profile adultery case involving Richard Hope Gordon. As Lady Bensley, she died in Berners Street, age 69 or 70.[19]

Having made a large fortune, Bensley died without issue.[20] Robert Bensley the actor was his nephew,[21] or son of James Bensley, uncle of William Bensley. Robert Bensley inherited from Sir William, an estate that was reported as worth £4,000 per year.[22]

Notes

  1. William Betham (1805). The Baronetage of England, Or the History of the English Baronets, and Such Baronets of Scotland, as are of English Families: With Genealogical Tables, and Engravings of Their Armorial Bearings. Miller. p. 452.
  2. George IV (King of Great Britain) (1963). The correspondence of George, Prince of Wales, 1770-1812. Cassell. p. 220 note 5.
  3. The Gentleman's Magazine: 1810. E. Cave. 1810. p. 84.
  4. James Gordon Parker, The Directors of the East India Company 1754–1790, Edinburgh University Ph.D. 1977 (PDF) pp. 22–3
  5. Edward Dodwell (1839). Alphabetical List of the Honourable East India Company's Bengal Civil Servants, from the Year 1780, to the Year 1838. Longman, Orme, Brown. p. 28.
  6. Charles John Shore Baron Teignmouth (1843). Memoir of the Life and Correspondence of John, Lord Teignmouth. Hatchard. p. 118.
  7. "No. 15372". The London Gazette. 2 June 1801. p. 619.
  8. Penelope Hunting (2002). The History of the Royal Society of Medicine. Royal Society of Medicine Press Limited. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-85315-497-3.
  9. J. V. Harrison The Routledges of Cumcrook (PDF), Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Vol. 65 (1965), p. 320 pp. 339–40
  10. Wm. H. Allen and Co. (1856). Allen's Indian Mail, and Register of Intelligence for British and Foreign India, China, and All Parts of the East. p. 339.
  11. Rocher, Rosane. "Halhed, Nathaniel Brassey". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11923. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. John Burke (1838). A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies of England, by J. and J. B. Burke. p. 57.
  13. John Wodderspoon (1850). Memorials of the Ancient Town of Ipswich, in the County of Suffolk. Pawsey. p. 217.
  14. Letters, nos 601-700, in Prisoners' Letters to the Bank of England, 1781-1827, ed. Deirdre Palk (London, 2007), pp. 186–222. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/london-record-soc/vol42/pp186-222 [accessed 10 March 2017].
  15. Edward Wedlake Brayley; Mantell (1850). A Topographical History of Surrey: the geological section by Gedeon Mantell. G. Willis. p. 122.
  16. Marshall, George William (1877). "The Genealogist". Internet Archive. London: Golding and Lawrence: George Bell & Sons. p. 319. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
  17. The Gentleman's Magazine. F. Jefferies. 1830. pp. 281–2.
  18. Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century: Consisting of Authentic Memoirs and Original Letters of Eminent Persons; and Intended as a Sequel to the Literary Anecdotes. author. 1831. p. 763.
  19. Belle Assemblée: Or, Court and Fashionable Magazine; Containing Interesting and Original Literature, and Records of the Beau-monde. J. Bell. 1830. p. 184.
  20. Notes and Queries. 1852. p. 115.
  21. Philip H. Highfill; Kalman A. Burnim; Edward A. Langhans (1973). A Biographical Dictionary of Actors, Actresses, Musicians, Dancers, Managers and Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660-1800. SIU Press. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-8093-0518-6.
  22. The European Magazine, and London Review. Philological Society of London. 1813. p. 73.
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New title Baronet
(of Saint Marylebone)
1801–1809
Extinct
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