Joseph Hambro | |
Birth Date: | 1780 11, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Copenhagen, Denmark |
Death Place: | London, England |
Nationality: | Danish |
Spouse: | Marianne von Halle |
Parents: | Calmer Hambro Thobe Levy |
Relatives: | Wulf Levin von Halle (father-in-law) Everard Hambro (grandson) |
Joseph Hambro (4 November 1780 – 3 October 1848) was a Danish merchant, banker and political advisor.
Joseph Hambro was born in 1780 in Copenhagen, Denmark.[1] His father, Calmer Hambro, was a Jewish silk and textile merchant, who was born in Rendsburg.[1] At the age of 17, Hambro came to Hamburg where he received his education at Fürst, Haller & Co.
Hambro was a merchant and banker.[1] In 1800, he joined his father's bank and renamed it C. J. Hambro & Son.[1] Under his leadership, the bank gave loans to the Danish government from 1821 to 1827.[1]
In circa. 1830, he acquired Bodenhoffs Plads in Christianshavn, from then on known as Hambros Plads, establishing both a rice mill with Denmark's first steam engine, the country's first canned food factory and a bakery at the site.[2]
Hambro became an advisor to Johan Sigismund von Møsting, who served as the Danish Minister of Finance.[1]
He was married to Marianne von Halle (1786–1838), the daughter of Wulf Levin von Halle, a merchant from Copenhagen.[1] They had a son, Carl Joachim Hambro, who moved to London, England, where he founded the Hambros Bank in 1839.[3]
He died in 1848 in London, where he had moved earlier that year.[1] [3]