Charles Peto Bennett (1856–1940) was an English timber merchant and company director of Lombard Street, London. He was a business partner of Alfred Baldwin Raper, and associate of Marentius Thams of Trondheim.[1]
Charles Peto Bennett was son and nephew of merchants in mahogany;[2] his father had warehouses on the River Thames.[3] He set up in business in Lombard Street in 1877.[2] A timber import partnership with Lars August Brolin was dissolved in 1890. Bennett was also involved in the 1890 bankruptcy of the timber merchant Arthur Henry Lilley, trading as Lilley, Bennett & Co. from 27 Lombard Street, in debt to Brolin, Bennett & Co.[4]
In 1887 Bennett became a director of Myers Patent Box, a company set up to automate production of wooden boxes and barrels, which took over the going concern at the Invicta Works, Bow Common of the cork merchants L. Lumley & Co.[5] [6] A 1916 advertisement for C. Peto Bennett of London and Liverpool offered "Box Shooks for Shell Cases, Ammunition, Ration, Bacon, Biscuit, Rum, Jam, Petroleum, Clothing, Tea, and all other Boxes."[7] By 1919 they had a reputation as clearly the largest British importer of box shooks (i.e. slats), for the manufacture of wooden boxes.[8]
C. Peto Bennett was UK agent for boxes from Färjenäs Aktiebolag of Gothenburg.[9] [10] The company also represented S. A. Woods Machine Co. of Boston.[11] [12]
Around 1890 Bennett visited British North Borneo, and set up there North Borneo Rubber Estates, Ltd., which he ran for many years.[2] E. Peto Bennett of 27 Lombard Street was in 1891 handling a cargo of Borneo hardwoods.[13]
Bennett became a director on the 1897 launch of Jarrahdale Jarrah Forests & Railways Ltd.[14] It went into voluntary liquidation in 1901, Bennett being one of the liquidators. Eight Jarrahdale timber companies were in 1902 consolidated into Millars Karri and Jarrah Forests Limited of Western Australia.[15] Bennett was a director of Millars, and in 1914 and 1924 a director of Millars Timber & Trading Co., a successor company.[16] [17] [18] [19] He had visited Western Australia in 1906 with Leama Robert Davies of London, another director of Millars and son of Maurice Coleman Davies, a founder of the timber industry there. In an interview for the The West Australian, Bennett commented on the economics of jarrah (Eucalyptus marginata), used for railway sleepers in India, and karri (Eucalyptus diversicolor).[20] [21] [18]
Other directorships (1914) held by Bennett were in Argentine Hardwoods & Lands Co. Ltd., Bode Rubber Estates Ltd., and Dominica Forests & Sawmills, Ltd.[22] In 1921 Alfred Baldwin Raper was a partner in C. Peto Bennett, and a director of Dominica Forests & Sawmills.[23] The partnership was dissolved in 1929.
In 1927 Bennett also was a director of Tuaran Rubber Estates, Ltd.[24] That year The Californian Lumber Merchant reported on the month-long visit Bennett made to the Philippines, with honorary consul Niels Christian Gude. Millars Timber & Trading Co. had two large subsidiaries in Manila.[25]
By 1908, Bennett owned the Southern Cross pearl formation, of nine pearls, which was shown at the Franco-British Exhibition.[26] It was on display again at the British Empire Exhibition in 1924.[27] [28]
Bennett bought pictures by Adriaen van de Velde, Paulus Potter and Frans van Mieris the Elder in or shortly after 1928.[29] [30] [31]
Bennett married Kristine Elisabeth Gudde (1886–1982) from Trondheim, known as "Kiss", when she was 17.[32] They had two sons.
The elder son Alfred Edwin Peto Bennett (1905–1996) was born in Cobham, Surrey. He married in 1935 Helle Huitfeldt, co-owner of the Norwegian media business Schibsted.[33] As a great-granddaughter of Christian Schibsted, she held one-sixth of the company.[34]
The second son (Charles) Peto Bennett (1906–1978) was born in Perth, Western Australia. His roles in the RAF and the military mission to Norway in 1945 were recognised by the awards of the Order of the British Empire and the King Haakon VII Freedom Cross.[35] His daughter Anne Christine married in 1962 Sir Richard Baker Wilbraham, 8th Baronet.
Bennett's great-granddaughter Tilly (Matilde) Culme-Seymour wrote a family memoir Island Summers (2013) about Småholmene, a small island in the Skaggerak.[36]