Stamboom Servaes, Maastricht/Venlo/Straelen/Neuss/Düsseldorf » Edmund Hoyle Vestey (1866-1953)

Persoonlijke gegevens Edmund Hoyle Vestey 

  • Hij is geboren op 3 februari 1866 in Rainford, Lancashire, England, United Kingdom.
  • Vermelding.
    Sir Edmund Hoyle Vestey, 1st Baronet (3 February 1866 – 18 November 1953) was an English food producer and importer and shipowner, and co-founder with his brother William of Vestey Brothers.

    Vestey was born in Rainford, Lancashire,[1] the fifth child of provision merchant Samuel Vestey. He was educated at the Liverpool Institute and then joined his father's firm in 1883. He was soon given the management of his father's corned beef cannery in Chicago. In 1890 he joined William in his new business of importing refrigerated meat from Argentina. The Union Cold Storage Company was to become one of the world's largest cold storage operations. They began to diversify into other food products and in 1906 also began importing from China. In 1909, they purchased two tramp steamers (Pakeha, renamed Broderick, and Rangatira, renamed Brodmore) for the China trade and converted them into refrigerated ships. This was the beginning of the Blue Star Line, which was registered in 1911. They set up their own cattle ranches in Argentina. By 1925 the Blue Star Line was the largest refrigerated fleet in the world. In the United Kingdom the Vestey brothers owned 2,365 butcher's shops. Edmund succeeded William as chairman in 1940 and held the post until his death in 1953.

    He was created a Baronet in the 1921 Birthday Honours for his services in supplying food to British troops during the First World War.

    Vestey married Sarah Barker on 15 August 1887; they had 7 children. After their divorce, Sarah married Conservative Member of Parliament Sir William Lane-Mitchell. Vestey married Ellen Soward on 10 March 1926, and they remained together until his death. They had no children
  • Vermelding.
    Vestey Baronetcy, of Shirley in the County of Surrey
  • Vermelding.Bron 1
    Vestey, William, first Baron Vestey (1859-1940), industrialist and food importer, and his business partner, Sir Edmund Hoyle Vestey, first baronet (1866-1953), were both born in Liverpool. William was the eldest (b. 21 January 1859), and Edmund was the fifth child (b. 3 February 1866), of Samuel Vestey (1832-1902), a Yorshirerman and provision merchant, and Hannah n�e Utley (d. 1884). Samuel ran a business in Liverpool, buying and selling mainly provisions imported from North America. Both William and Edmund after an education at the Liverpool Institute, gained experience in the family business.

    At the age of seventeen William was sent to the USA to buy and ship home goods for his father. He established a canning factory in Chicago, and purchased the cheaper cuts of meat to make corned beet which he shipped to Liverpool. This venture was successful, and the management of the canary was given to Edmund, who had joined the firm in 1883. In 1890 William traveled to Argentina, and decided to exploit the uses of refrigeration to preserve foodstuffs. He began by shipping frozen partridges and later mutton and beef, from Argentina to Britain. William was joined in this enterprise by Edmund, and in 1890 they established the first cold store in Liverpool which as the Union Cold Storage Company was to become one of the world�s largest cold storage operations. They soon diversified into other products, using their extensive network of cold stores to accommodate all types of perishable foodstuffs, and developed their supplies on a worldwide basis. In 1906 they began to ship eggs, chickens, and other produce from China. The China trade led them into another avenue of business when they purchased two tramp steamers in 1909, and converted hen, into refrigerated ships. This was the beginning of the Blue Star Line, which they registered in 1911, with a capital of �100,000. In the next five years they acquired five more ships, as well as a butchery business, a chain of retail shops in Britain, and small freezing works in Australia and New Zealand. This set the pattern for later growth of the Vestey empire�a totally integrated business, with control of every link in the chain of processing and distribution of food from producer to consumer.
    A prominent part of the Vesteys� worldwide holdings was the cattle-raising farms and ranches, which enabled them to control supplies to their meat-packing and cold storage plants. After 1915 Argentina became an important base for their operations, especially when Britain�s 1914 Finance Act with its high taxes made them tax exiles there. While their business made large profits in the First World War supplying the British Army with meat, the Vesteys applied themselves energetically to their Argentinean on packing houses. They returned to Britain in 1919 when William appeared before the royal commission on income tax to argue the need for a return to pre-1915 tax levels. Unable to convince the government of the validity of their case, in 1921 the Vesteys and their advisers devised a complex and highly successful scheme which not only satisfied their desire to live in Britain and avoid paying any personal tax but also showed them to be as innovative and pioneering in the field of tax avoidance as in the food business. The greater part of the Vesteys� overseas empire ,was leased to their British company Union Cold Storage Ltd. for a yearly rent of �960,000, which was used to set up a Paris trust fund. From the trust the money flowed into the Western United Investment Company in Britain, a Vestey holding company in which the family held the management shares and controlling interest, and thence, tax free, into the pockets of the Vestry brothers. Once domiciled again in England, Edmund was created a baronet in 1921. and the following year William purchased a peerage from the Lloyd George government, apparently for �25,000 (he had been made a baronet in 1921 for his role in making food more widely available). The peerage evoked a letter of protest from George V. who felt it wrong that a man who declined to pay national taxes should be ennobled.

    Edmund�s first marriage 1887 to Sarah Barker produced six children before they divorced in 1926. His second marriage was on 10 March 1926, to Ellen Soward (d. 1953).

    The Vesteys� ownership of refrigerated ships increased so that by 1925 they had, in Blue Star, the largest refrigerated fleet in the world. In Britain they owned cold stores in several cities as well as 2365 retail butchers shops. The advantage of such an all-embracing organization for perishable commodities that they could be held until prices were right, and once the chain of processing had started the arrival of further supplies would be controlled to avoid losses from overstocked markets. Their operations in Britain were managed from the Union Cold Storage Company Ltd, which by 1925 had a capital of �9,628,575. By 1933 the Union had an issued capital of �12 million. Despite the depression the Vesteys business continued to expand, especially in Australia where in 1934 they took over the Anglis meat interests for �1.5 million.
    William Vestey was married twice: first in 1882 to Sarah (d.1923), daughter of George Ellis of Birkenhead; second on 9 August 1924 in New York to Evelene Brodstone (1875-1941), daughter of Norwegian emigrants to Superior, Nebraska. His second wife had joined the Vesteys� Chicago organization in 1895 as a secretary, and became a powerful figure in the enterprise as its international troubleshooter. Her help proved indispensable to the Vesteys in retaining their direct control over a multinational corporation which by William�s death was conservatively valued at �90 million. William�s son and heir from his first marriage, Samuel (1882-1954) later joined Edmund in running the family business during the eventful post-war years. William died on 10 December 1940 at his home, Cleeve Cottage, Bulstrode Way, Gerrards Cross. His remains were interned at the parish church of St Peter Foley, Lancaster; his ashes were later re-interned in the Anglican cathedral in Liverpool. Edmund died, still chairman, on 18 November 1953 at St Bartholomew�s Hospital, London, and his son, Ronald (b.1898) assumed control of the business.

    RICHARD PERREN

    Acknowledgement: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  • Hij is overleden op 18 november 1953, hij was toen 87 jaar oud.
  • Een kind van Samuel Vestey en Hannah Uttley
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 18 december 2022.

Gezin van Edmund Hoyle Vestey

(1) Hij is getrouwd met Sarah Barker.

Zij zijn getrouwd op 15 augustus 1887 te Passale, New Jersey, United States, hij was toen 21 jaar oud.

Edmund and Sarah divorced in 1925, on the grounds of his adultery according to the Westminster Gazette, 8 July 1925.

Kind(eren):

  1. John Joseph Vestey  1888-1932
  2. Samuel B. Vestey  1890-????
  3. Percy Charles Vestey  1893-1939 
  4. Hannah Vestey  1897-1998
  5. William Vestey  1902-1971

Het echtpaar is in 1925 gescheiden.Bron 2

Oorzaak: adultery


(2) Hij is getrouwd met Ellen Soward.

Zij zijn getrouwd op 10 maart 1926, hij was toen 60 jaar oud.

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Edmund Hoyle Vestey

Samuel Vestey
1832-1902

Edmund Hoyle Vestey
1866-1953

(1) 1887

Sarah Barker
± 1866-1940

Hannah Vestey
1897-1998
(2) 1926

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    Bronnen

    1. https://www.bluestarline.org/william_vestey.htm
    2. Westminster Gazette, 8 July 1925

    Historische gebeurtenissen

    • De temperatuur op 3 februari 1866 lag rond de 6,6 °C. Er was 0.7 mm neerslag. De winddruk was 13 kgf/m2 en kwam overheersend uit het west-zuid-westen. De luchtdruk bedroeg 75 cm kwik. De relatieve luchtvochtigheid was 85%. Bron: KNMI
    • Koning Willem III (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1849 tot 1890 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
    • Van 1 februari 1862 tot 10 februari 1866 was er in Nederland het kabinet Thorbecke II met als eerste minister Mr. J.R. Thorbecke (liberaal).
    • Van 10 februari 1866 tot 1 juni 1866 was er in Nederland het kabinet Fransen van de Putte met als eerste minister I.D. Fransen van de Putte (liberaal).
    • Van 1 juni 1866 tot 4 juni 1868 was er in Nederland het kabinet Van Zuijlen van Nijevelt - Heemskerk met als eerste ministers Mr. J.P.J.A. graaf Van Zuijlen van Nijevelt (AR) en Mr. J. Heemskerk Azn. (conservatief).
    • In het jaar 1866: Bron: Wikipedia
      • Nederland had zo'n 3,6 miljoen inwoners.
      • 27 januari » De opera Zaide van componist W.A. Mozart gaat in première in Frankfurt.
      • 26 maart » Carol I van Roemenië wordt verkozen tot domnitor (vorst) van Roemenië.
      • 15 april » Ontdekking van het decreet van Canopus.
      • 20 juli » In de Adriatische Zee vindt in het kader van de Pruisisch-Oostenrijkse Oorlog de Slag bij Lissa plaats.
      • 1 augustus » België tekent als negende Westers land een Vriendschaps- en handelsverdrag met het Japanse shogunaat.
      • 12 december » Een ondergrondse mijnexplosie in Barnsley, Engeland zorgt voor veel doden.
    • De temperatuur op 10 maart 1926 lag tussen 2,1 °C en 7,7 °C en was gemiddeld 4,9 °C. Er was 1,1 mm neerslag. Er was 4,2 uur zonneschijn (37%). De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 6 Bft (krachtige wind) en kwam overheersend uit het west-noord-westen. Bron: KNMI
    • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1890 tot 1948 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
    • Van 4 augustus 1925 tot 8 maart 1926 was er in Nederland het kabinet Colijn I met als eerste minister Dr. H. Colijn (ARP).
    • Van 8 maart 1926 tot 10 augustus 1929 was er in Nederland het kabinet De Geer I met als eerste minister Jonkheer mr. D.J. de Geer (CHU).
    • In het jaar 1926: Bron: Wikipedia
      • Nederland had zo'n 7,4 miljoen inwoners.
      • 14 maart » François Morel, Canadees componist/muziekpedagoog/dirigent/pianist († 2018)
      • 16 maart » Robert Goddard lanceert de eerste raket met vloeibare brandstof.
      • 9 mei » De Amerikaanse ontdekkingsreizigers Richard Byrd en Floyd Bennett vliegen als eersten over de Noordpool.
      • 26 september » In Oslo wordt het Ullevaal Stadion geopend.
      • 31 oktober » Mislukte aanslag op Benito Mussolini
      • 1 november » Het Uruguayaans voetbalelftal wint voor de zesde keer de Copa América door in de voorlaatste competitiewedstrijd met 6-1 te winnen van Paraguay.
    • De temperatuur op 18 november 1953 lag tussen 3,7 °C en 7,0 °C en was gemiddeld 5,6 °C. Er was 0,2 mm neerslag. Het was vrijwel geheel bewolkt. De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 2 Bft (zwakke wind) en kwam overheersend uit het zuid-westen. Bron: KNMI
    • Koningin Juliana (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 4 september 1948 tot 30 april 1980 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
    • Van 2 september 1952 tot 13 oktober 1956 was er in Nederland het kabinet Drees II met als eerste minister Dr. W. Drees (PvdA).
    • In het jaar 1953: Bron: Wikipedia
      • Nederland had zo'n 10,4 miljoen inwoners.
      • 1 februari » Watersnood; Nederlandse, Belgische en Engelse zeedijken breken door bij een stormvloed: 1835 doden.
      • 12 april » Oprichting van de Duitse voetbalclub SG Dynamo Dresden.
      • 25 april » James Watson en Francis Crick publiceren in Nature de structuur van het menselijk DNA.
      • 18 mei » De Amerikaanse Jacqueline Cochran vliegt als eerste vrouw sneller dan het geluid.
      • 2 juni » Elizabeth II van het Verenigd Koninkrijk wordt gekroond tot koningin, de eerste kroning die op televisie wordt uitgezonden.
      • 25 oktober » Voor de eerste keer wordt een voetbalwedstrijd uitgezonden op de Nederlandse televisie. Voor de rechten van Nederland-België betaalt de NTS vijfhonderd gulden aan de KNVB. Nederland telt dertigduizend televisietoestellen.
    

    Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

    Bron: Wikipedia

    Bron: Wikipedia


    Over de familienaam Vestey

    • Bekijk de informatie die Genealogie Online heeft over de familienaam Vestey.
    • Bekijk de informatie die Open Archieven heeft over Vestey.
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    Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
    A.R. Servaes, "Stamboom Servaes, Maastricht/Venlo/Straelen/Neuss/Düsseldorf", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-servaes/I7530.php : benaderd 24 juni 2024), "Edmund Hoyle Vestey (1866-1953)".