Thomas Cleeve

Sir Thomas Henry Cleeve (June 5, 1844 – December 19, 1908) was a Canadian-born businessman, domiciled in Ireland, who was elected High Sheriff of Limerick City on three occasions.

Thomas Cleeve
Sir Thomas Cleeve
Born(1844-06-05)June 5, 1844
DiedDecember 19, 1908(1908-12-19) (aged 64)
OccupationBusinessman

Background

Thomas Cleeve was born in Cleveland, Quebec in Canada, and was the eldest son of Edward Elmes Cleeve, an English immigrant, and Sophia Journeaux, whose family came from Ireland.[1]

Business career

In 1860 Thomas Cleeve travelled to Ireland to stay with his mother's relatives who ran an agricultural machinery business in Limerick known as J.P. Evans & Company. Young Thomas decided to remain in Ireland and eventually assumed control of the business.[2]

In 1883, Cleeve started a new enterprise, the Condensed Milk Company of Ireland, in conjunction with two local businessmen. The company manufactured dairy products, such as condensed milk, butter, cheese and confectionery. Its headquarters were located in Limerick city, on the northern bank of the River Shannon. The business expanded over the next 20 years to become the largest of its type in the United Kingdom.[2]

Cleeve was also senior partner in the Cleeve Canning and Cold Storage Company based in British Columbia.[3]

He was the President of Limerick Chamber in 1908-09.[4]

Public office

In 1899, Cleeve was voted on to Limerick City Council. That same year, his fellow councillors elected him as High Sheriff of Limerick City, the Queen's representative in the city. He held the position again in 1907 and 1908.[2]

In 1900, following a visit to Ireland by Queen Victoria, Cleeve received a knighthood from the Lord Lieutenant.[2]

Final illness

In December 1908, Cleeve was taken ill at a public function.[5] Despite undergoing surgery, he died of peritonitis a few days later at the age of 64.[2] According to contemporary newspaper reports his funeral was one of the largest seen in Limerick city, with crowds lining the streets up to an hour before the cortège passed.[3] He is buried in the churchyard of St. Mary's Cathedral in the city.[6]

Family

Cleeve married Phoebe Agnes Dann in 1874 and they had five children. The author and broadcaster Brian Cleeve was a grand-nephew of Sir Thomas Cleeve.[1]

gollark: It's done, though I can't figure out how to make the search bar have `width: 100%` and `margin: 1em` without overflowing.
gollark: I'm going for fuzzy search; I managed to write very simple F# bindings for a JS library for it, and it seems relatively simple to implement.
gollark: Should I bother with fuzzy search or just do (the equivalent of) string.find?
gollark: You can just write this one line shellscript:`./summarise.py | ./discord.py`
gollark: It's a different thing, though.

References

  1. Burke, Sir Bernard, Burke's Irish family records, Burke's Peerage, 1976
  2. Lee, David and Jacobs, Debbie, Made in Limerick Vol.1, History of industries, trade and commerce, Limerick Civic Trust, 2003
  3. Irish Independent, December 21, 1908 (p.5)
  4. Potter, Matthew (2015). Limerick's Merchants, Traders and Shakers. Limerick: Limerick Chamber. ISBN 9780953835416.
  5. The Irish Times, "Serious illness of Sir Thomas Cleeve", December 19, 1908
  6. "Episode 4 Rediscovering Limerick - Cleeve's Condensed Milk Factory". Limerick's Life. June 29, 2013.

Further reading

  • Jim Bruce, Faithful Servant: A Memoir of Brian Cleeve (Lulu, 2007, ISBN 978-1-84753-064-6)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.