Mark Huish Explained

Captain Mark Huish (9 March 1808 – 18 January 1867) was an English railway manager. He is best known for his term as General Manager of the London & North Western Railway, a position he held for 12 years, beginning from the company's formation in 1846.

Early life

Huish was born in Nottingham on 9 March 1808, the son of Mark Huish and Elizabeth Gainsford. He was baptised in High Pavement Presbyterian Church on 6 April 1808.

His father, Mark Huish (1 March 1776 – 14 January 1833) was a deputy-lieutenant for Nottinghamshire. His mother, Elizabeth Gainsford (d. 1824), was the daughter of John Gainsford of Worksop. They married on 5 August 1799.

Military career

At age 16 he was sent to India to enter the service of the East India Company, where he joined the 67th regiment Bengal Native Infantry as an Ensign. Huish rose through the ranks and by 1834, at the age of 26, he became entitled to a 3-year leave which allowed him to return to England. While he was in England his promotion to captain was gazetted. For the rest of his life he always styled himself Captain Mark Huish.

Business career

At this time Huish had to make a choice: either to return to India at the end of the leave, which would have committed him to a long period without the prospect of returning home, or to look for employment in another sphere. He had become interested in the possibility of working in railway management and applied for the position of Secretary to the newly formed Glasgow, Paisley and Greenock Railway. Huish was selected from amongst the more than 60 applicants and he began work in Glasgow on 24 November 1837. He remained with the company until 7 July 1841 when he resigned on being offered the job of Secretary to the Grand Junction Railway company, a significant promotion.

The Grand Junction Railway merged with the London and Birmingham Railway and the Manchester and Birmingham Railway to become the London & North Western Railway. In October 1846 the Directors of the combined company appointed Huish General Manager at a salary of £2,000 p.a., This was an incredibly high salary for the time.

In 1851-52 a paper on 'Railway Accidents' submitted to the Institution of Civil Engineers was awarded the Telford Medal in silver.[1]

Huish exerted a strong influence over the development of the company, and he was responsible for several important developments in railway management and accounting practice which were taken up by other companies. However, his bullying style and arrogance meant that he made enemies. This management style coupled with increasingly difficult trading conditions brought about Huish's downfall. By 1858 his position had become untenable, and he resigned his situation with the London & North Western. Despite all he had done for the company, and his contribution was certainly considerable, he received a pay-off of just 18 months salary, and a free pass for life. Significantly, he did not get a pension.

After the London & North Western

In 1859 Huish was appointed deputy chairman of the London Pneumatic Despatch Company.

Huish was also a director of the Isle of Wight Railway Company which was authorised in 1860 and which opened in 1864. By this time Huish was living in Bonchurch in the South East of the Island.[2]

Huish died on the Isle of Wight on 18 January 1867 at the age of 58.[3] Huish's wife Margaret commissioned a memorial grotto to her husband which was constructed at eastern end of Bonchurch Pond, Bonchurch, Isle of Wight. The inscription records that following a successful business career he retired to the Island and "in Mitchell Avenue, opposite the bowling green he built several houses. He also initiated the local geological collection."

Notes and References

  1. Book: Manby, Charles . MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS 1851-52; . 169.
  2. Book: Bradshaw's Railway manual for Shareholders 1864. 1864.
  3. Book: Gourvish, T. R. . Mark Huish and the London & North Western Railway: A Study of Management . Leicester University Press . 1972.