Term Start: | 25 July 1808 |
Term End: | 29 October 1811 |
Predecessor: | Patrick Bruce |
Successor: | Frederick Trench |
Office1: | Member of Parliament for East Retford |
Term Start1: | 1806 |
Term End1: | 1807 |
Predecessor1: | John Jaffray Robert Craufurd |
Alongside1: | Charles Craufurd |
Successor1: | William Ingilby Charles Craufurd |
Thomas Hughan | |
Birth Place: | Kirkmabreck, Kirkcudbright |
Death Place: | Hampstead, London |
Nationality: | Scottish |
Occupation: | Slave trader, politician |
Children: | 3 |
Relatives: | Janetta Manners, Duchess of Rutland (granddaughter) Sir Arthur Henniker-Hughan (great-grandson) |
Thomas Hughan (– 29 October 1811) was a Scottish slave trader, merchant and politician affiliated with the West India Dock Company.[1]
Hughan was born in Burns, Kirkmabreck, Kirkcudbright. He was the eldest son of Margaret (Gerran) Hughan and Alexander Hughan, a merchant from Creetown.[2] He had one brother, Alexander Hughan, who died 30 March 1810. His sister, Jane Hughan, married James Dalzell of Armagh.
During the late 18th century, Hughan spent 12 years in Jamaica working for the slave-trading West India Dock Company, returning to London around 1797. He continued working for the Company and was promoted to Director in 1803, and to Deputy Chairman in 1805. He also served as founding member and Director of the Imperial Fire Insurance Company.[3]
Hughan served as a Member of Parliament twice, for the constituency of East Retford from 1806 to 1807, and for Dundalk from 25 July 1808 to 29 October 1811.[4] On 27 February 1807, he used his maiden speech in the House of Commons to protest against the proposed abolition of the slave trade, stating that the bill was "fraught with ruin to the colonies and to the Empire", and that "there did not exist a more happy race than the slaves in our colonies".[5] He voted against the bill twice but failed to defeat it, the bill passing into law as the Slave Trade Act 1807, which formally prohibited the slave trade in the British Empire. (Slavery itself was not abolished until the Slavery Abolition Act in 1833).
In 1810, Hughan was called before the Bullion Committee to answer questions regarding the bullion supply in Jamaica and the excessive dividend payments of the West India Dock Company.
While residing in London, he lived at 8 Billiter Square and 12 Devonshire Place. His Scottish address was The Hill, Luetown, Galloway.[6] On 1 February 1810, he married Jean Milligan,[7] eldest daughter of Robert Milligan, the slave-owner and dock promoter in part responsible for the construction of the West India Docks. He had two illegitimate daughters and one son:
Hughan died following a short illness at Hampstead, London, on 29 October 1811,[6] two days before his son was born. Neither of his two illegitimate daughters, Jane Hughan and Margaret Hughan, had reached the age of twenty-one by the time of his death, so they were likely born in the West Indies. Margaret married James Spence, Esq. of Broughton Place, Edinburgh, in 1818.[9]
Through his son and heir Thomas of Airds House, Parton, Galloway, he was a grandfather of Janetta Hughan, who married John Manners, 7th Duke of Rutland;[8] and Louisa Hughan, who married Sir Brydges Henniker, 4th Baronet (parents of Sir Arthur Henniker-Hughan, 6th Baronet, MP for Galloway).[10]