John William Buckle Explained

John William Buckle (1775-20 February 1846),[1] was a businessman, merchant and solicitor of Mark Lane, London.[2] He was a partner in the ship-owning merchant firm of Buckle, Buckle,[3] (sometimes abbreviated to Buckles) Bagster and Buchanan, whose partners were his brother, Thomas Henry Buckle, Henry Bagster and Walter Buchanan. John William Buckle was chairman of the Shipowners’ Society from 1814 to 1824[4] and of the Committee for the Relief of Distressed Seamen from 1818.[5] He was a member of the short-lived London chamber of commerce in 1823 and 1824, as a wine and brandy merchant, insurance broker and ship manager.[6]

Buckles, Bagster and Buchanan's ships included the Admiral Gambier, Baring, Barossa, Batavia,[7] General Graham and Mangles. They carried convicts, wool and general cargoes and their Australian contacts included, the Colonial Surgeon James Bowman, and the Sydney merchant, Thomas Iceley.

The brothers were the sons of William Buckle, then at Elbow Lane, Ratcliffe, London, but already a wine merchant. The 1784 London Directories showed William Buckle had moved to 64 Queens Street, Cheapside. Henry & Wm Bagster were then sugar refiners in Princes Street, Ratcliffe. They came together as Buckles & Bagster, wine and spirit traders, about 1811. In 1807 John William Buckle gained the Freedom of the City of London as a member of the Company of Skinners. By 1825 he was a director of the Australian Agricultural Company[8] and remained so until his death. He was a director of Indemnity Mutual Marine Insurance (now part of Aviva)[9] and of the Union Bank of Australia from 1837, until his death.[10] In 1825 he became solicitor for the New Zealand Company and remained on its board until 1844.[11]

In 1798 Buckle married Sarah Boyd. They lived at Hither Green.

Many places in Wellington[12] and elsewhere were given names associated with the New Zealand Company.[13] One of them is Buckle St, in Mount Cook, Wellington, named after John William Buckle. It now forms part of State Highway 1, between Taranaki Street and Basin Reserve.[14]

Notes and References

  1. 21 February 1846 . Died . Morning Herald.
  2. Web site: 6 July 2022 . New Zealand Company Records . Pandora Research.
  3. Web site: Hilda McDonnell . The Rosanna Settlers . 2022-12-16 . Wellington City Libraries.
  4. Web site: PEMBERTON . Penelope Anne . July 1991 . THE LONDON CONNECTION: THE FORMATION AND EARLY YEARS OF THE AUSTRALIAN AGRICULTURAL COMPANY .
  5. Cook . G C . 2007 . Committee for the Relief of Distressed Seamen . Postgraduate Medical Journal . 83 . 975 . 54–58 . 10.1136/pgmj.2006.054296 . 0032-5473 . 2599958 . 17267679.
  6. Web site: London chamber of commerce, Members 1823-4 .
  7. Web site: John William Buckle . 2022-12-17 . threedecks.org.
  8. News: 1825-05-12 . AUSTRALIAN AGRICULTURAL COMPANY. . Australian . 2022-12-17.
  9. Web site: 2021-07-15 . Legacy companies . 2022-12-17 . www.aviva.com . en-GB.
  10. News: 1846-11-25 . UNION BANK OF AUSTRALIA. . Launceston Examiner . 2022-12-17.
  11. Web site: 14 December 1844 . Thirteenth Report of the Directors of the New Zealand Company. New Zealand Spectator and Cook's Strait Guardian . 2022-12-17 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  12. Web site: 5 Jul 1905 . WELLINGTON CITY STREET NAMES. NEW ZEALAND MAIL . 2022-12-17 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  13. Web site: 10 Jul 1923 . THE BULLER RIVER. EVENING POST . 2022-12-17 . paperspast.natlib.govt.nz.
  14. Web site: CANN . GED . 2014-03-21 . Jail, riots and a war memorial . 2022-12-17 . Stuff . en.