John Smith (banker)
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John Smith (29 August 1797 – 23 September 1866) was a Scottish banker and philanthropist. He was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, and spent most of his adult life running Beckett's Bank in Leeds, England. In retirement, he lived in Harrogate. Smith supported many charities, funding churches, schools and other causes in Abetdeen and Leeds. He paid for one of the bells in Kirk of St Nicholas in Aberdeen, and funded most of the building of
St Matthias' Church, Burley St Matthias' Church is an Anglican church in Burley, Leeds, West Yorkshire. The church was completed in 1854 and the north aisle and west porch were added in 1886. It is a Grade II* listed building. History The church was funded by banker John ...
, as well as Burley's vicarage and school, and other local needs. He was an active member of Leeds
Chamber of Commerce A chamber of commerce, or board of trade, is a form of business network. For example, a local organization of businesses whose goal is to further the interests of businesses. Business owners in towns and cities form these local societies to ad ...
and a
Justice of the Peace A justice of the peace (JP) is a judicial officer of a lower or ''puisne'' court, elected or appointed by means of a commission ( letters patent) to keep the peace. In past centuries the term commissioner of the peace was often used with the sa ...
. However he is remembered today for his foundation of "Belvedere", the Harrogate mansion which was built for him by Richard Ellis and designed by Perkin and Backhouse, and also for his large stone monument which stands in Grove Road Cemetery.


Background

The youngest of four sons, Smith was born on 29 August 1797, in Aberdeen, Scotland, and baptised on 28 December 1798 at St Nicholas Church, Aberdeen. His parents were Alexander Smith (15 September 1765 – 27 August 1843) and Margaret Howie (23 January 1763 – 25 August 1852), both from
Banffshire Banffshire ; sco, Coontie o Banffshire; gd, Siorrachd Bhanbh) is a historic county, registration county and lieutenancy area of Scotland. The county town is Banff, although the largest settlement is Buckie to the west. It borders the Moray ...
. On 21 December 1822 at
St Leonard's, Shoreditch St Leonard's, Shoreditch, is the ancient parish church of Shoreditch, often known simply as Shoreditch Church. It is located at the intersection of Shoreditch High Street with Hackney Road, within the London Borough of Hackney in East London. The ...
, Smith married Ann Catherine Jane Metcalfe (6 March 1805 – 8 June 1854) of Middlesex. The eldest of their children mentioned in the Census is banker John Metcalfe Smith (1829 – 1870), born in Aberdeen. The next eldest was articled solicitor's clerk (later Bradford manufacturer) George Alderson Smith, born in Leeds in 1834. After him came Reverend William Alexander Smith M.A. (1840 – 23 August 1887) who was minister of St Mary's Chapel, Aberdeen. The youngest were Catherine "Clara" Ann Smith (born 2 May 1845), and Fanny Beckett Smith (1846–1913). Two of their grandchildren were Reginald Metcalfe Smith and Mabel Smith. In
Burley, Leeds Burley is an inner city area of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, north-west of Leeds city centre, between the A65 Kirkstall Road at the south and Headingley at the north, in the Kirkstall ward. Etymology The name is first attested in 1195 a ...
, Smith's residence was Burley House, and in Harrogate, Belvedere in Victoria Avenue, but the Census does not mention Harrogate. In 1841, the England Census finds John Smith and his wife Ann living in Hyde Terrace, Leeds, with two of their sons: By 1851 the family had moved to Burley House on the corner of Burley Road and Cardigan Lane, and they had two sons, two daughters and three servants with them. On 27 March 1856 at St Mary the Less, Durham, Smith married his second wife Mary Anne Frances Hopper (born 1804), from Chelmsford. Mary was the daughter of Walter Carles Hopper of Belmont, County Durham, a rich landowner. Mary's brother Rev.
Augustus Hopper Augustus MacDonald Hopper (b Belmont, County Durham 11 August 1816– d Starston 7 January 1878) was Archdeacon of Norwich from 1868 until his death. Hopper was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge; and ordained in 1844. Crockford's Clerical ...
, honorary canon of Norwich, officiated at the wedding. Subsequently in 1861 the Census in Burley Lane, Leeds, finds Smith with his second wife Mary, and his son William is a student of Caius College, Cambridge. Although Smith is ill by this time, he describes himself as a banker and a West Riding of Leeds magistrate.


Career


Aberdeen and London

Smith served his apprenticeship at the Old Aberdeen Savings Bank, Aberdeen. Following his apprenticeship, he spent several years in "a large mercantile house" in London. In 1825, the Town and County Bank was established in Aberdeen, and he joined it as a teller, and the ''Banffshire Journal'' commented, "to this day s of 1866its notes are payable to John Smith or Bearer". Smith was "very much esteemed by his fellow officers in the Bank, and by the customers, for his business correctness and quiet, gentlemanly manners". Between 1830 and 1835 he held the "important" position of secretary to the Glasgow Union Bank.


Leeds

Smith first arrived in Leeds in 1835, joining the Leeds Banking Company (LBC) as its first manager. He remained in that position for five or six years, until William Beckett of the private bank Beckett & Co. (also known as Leeds Old Bank) became an MP in 1841. Smith was offered a partnership in the bank alongside William and Christopher Beckett, in response to the "admirable manner in which he administered the affairs" of the LBC. "The reputation of eckett'swas fully maintained and, if possible, enhanced by the accession of Mr Smith, whose business capabilities were of the highest order", and his services in the bank were very highly valued by Mr Beckett". Smith was particularly adept at assisting customers who met with financial difficulties. In 1848 Smith, with the involvement of William Beckett, purchased the former Leeds Zoological and Botanical Gardens possibly as a building speculation, in which a section was to be reserved as a cemetery. This scheme was abandoned, and the land sold on. Smith remained at Beckett's as partner until his last illness began around 1860, when he was obliged to withdraw gradually from commercial business.


Civic duties, institutions and philanthropy

Smith was involved in public duty and philanthropy in both Aberdeen and Leeds. In 1851 he was elected treasurer of Leeds
Chamber of Commerce A chamber of commerce, or board of trade, is a form of business network. For example, a local organization of businesses whose goal is to further the interests of businesses. Business owners in towns and cities form these local societies to ad ...
. In 1858, the same institution elected Smith to attend the select committee of the House of Commons to "give evidence in favour of the abolition of the clause which limits the Bank Directors in the issue of Bank of England notes to an amount of £14,475,000, except against gold, and that the Bank Directors be invested with a discretionary power to issue one pound notes of the Bank of England henever necessary. In 1856, Smith was a member of the Leeds Honorary Board for the Scottish Widows Fund and Life Assurance Society. By 1861, he had become a magistrate for the West Riding of Yorkshire. Smith was on the building committee which aimed to erect a new hospital - The Ilkley Hospital and Convalescent Home - at Ilkley. Smith was involved in a number of charitable institutions, including the Leeds West End People's Institute on Kirkstall Road in
Burley, Leeds Burley is an inner city area of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, north-west of Leeds city centre, between the A65 Kirkstall Road at the south and Headingley at the north, in the Kirkstall ward. Etymology The name is first attested in 1195 a ...
, where in 1856 he gave a speech at its first public meeting. In the same year he donated a harmonium to the new schoolroom associated with
St Matthias' Church, Burley St Matthias' Church is an Anglican church in Burley, Leeds, West Yorkshire. The church was completed in 1854 and the north aisle and west porch were added in 1886. It is a Grade II* listed building. History The church was funded by banker John ...
, which Smith had funded, and in which there are memorials to Smith and his first wife Ann Catherine Jane. Of Smith's philanthropy, the ''Leeds Times'' said:
mith'spublic spirit was evinced by the readiness with which he promoted the chief objects of benevolence which have interested eedsof late years, while Burley church, parsonage and schools, to the erection and support of which he was the largest contributor, are monuments of his care for the religious and mental improvement of his poorer neighbours. His private charities were also large and numerous. ''Leeds Times'', 1866.
The ''Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer'' reported:
mith'sgenerosity and kindness of heart were such that with him many a poor man will have lost a friend ever ready to help him in his need – a friend indeed, whose greatest happiness was going about to do good. ''Yorkshire Post'', 1866.
The ''Banffshire Journal'' reported:
Very many ... who had a personal knowledge of mith and of the benevolent and kind acts which he was constantly performing, will join most sincerely in their mourning and regret at the removal of such a man. He took a prominent interest in promoting the chief objects of benevolence in Leeds; while the church,
parsonage A clergy house is the residence, or former residence, of one or more priests or ministers of religion. Residences of this type can have a variety of names, such as manse, parsonage, rectory or vicarage. Function A clergy house is typically own ...
and school at Burley, which were mostly built at his cost, will remain a monument of his good deeds, and of his care for the religious improvement of his poorer neighbours. He gave a large contribution to assist in procuring berdeen's peal of bells, and felt at all times a great interest in any improvement in his native city. We know that he was very anxious for the establishment of a
convalescent Convalescence is the gradual recovery of health and strength after illness or injury. It refers to the later stage of an infectious disease or illness when the patient recovers and returns to previous health, but may continue to be a source of ...
hospital in Aberdeen, and in his last charities so very benevolent an object may possibly have been remembered. His private charities were many and large, and his considerate assistance will be missed in many quarters, where there will ever remain the memory of his personal gentleness and goodness of character". ''Banffshire Journal'', 1866.
.


Kirk St Nicholas, Aberdeen

The abovementioned peal of bells, of which one was funded by Smith, was for the Kirk of St Nicholas, Aberdeen, and in 1858 the nine bells were inaugurated by nine trained bell-ringers, also paid for by Smith. Smith's name was inscribed on the D flat bell. However, in 1874 a "great fire" destroyed the bell tower and all the bells, of which the tenor bell weighed 32 cwt or .


St Matthias' Church, Burley

This is a listed building, to which Smith donated much of the cost of the build. It was designed in 1853 by Perkin and Backhouse, (who later designed Belvedere for Smith) and consecrated in November 1854. Smith donated the land for it, and "subscribed liberally to the building fund", supported by the Beckett family, of Beckett's Bank, who paid for the spire, communion plate, and bells. The east window was installed in memory of Smith's first wife Ann Catherine Jane, who died in June 1854, and three other windows are in memory of Smith and two of his sons. Smith also paid for the reredos in 1869. All the carved work completed by 1854, including the font, was credited to Robert Mawer. A later addition to the church, in 1855, was a memorial to Smith's first wife: "a fine monument with crocketed pediment and pinnacles, and a carving in low relief of an angel with a departed spirit executed by Mr. B. Spence of Rome". Note: This source misprints "Charles Smith" for John Smith, but other sources including Historic England confirm that it was John Smith the banker. It was described at greater length by the ''Leeds Intelligencer'':
The monument is an exquisite piece of sculpture by Benjamin Spence, pupil of Gibson, and it was executed in Rome, from which the sculptor has lately returned. The design, in mezzo-relievo, represents an angel bearing the spirit of the deceased to heaven, and both in the arrangement of the group, and attitude in forms of the figures, and the sweet expression of composure thrown over the whole, it is exceedingly pleasing and impressive. The drapery gently floating in the breeze and the delicate feathering of the angel's wings are well worthy of note among the subordinate parts of the design. It is executed in pure white marble, and is inserted in a finely carved tabernacle or niche, in Sicilian marble, with crocketted canopy and enriched buttresses, of the Decorated Style, in conformity with the architecture of the building.
St Matthias' Church, Burley, Leeds (23496112778).jpg, St Matthias east window, dedicated to Smith's first wife St Matthias' Church, Burley, Leeds (36638778704).jpg, St Matthias transept memorial dedicated to Smith and family St Matthias' Church, Burley, Leeds (36678360583).jpg, St Matthias memorial by Spence, dedicated to Smith's first wife St Matthias' Church, Burley, Leeds (37317885832).jpg, St Matthias memorial dedicated to Smith's first wife St Matthias' Church, Burley, Leeds (37317879022).jpg, St Matthias memorial dedicated to Smith's family


Residences


Burley House

Smith moved into Burley House in
Burley, Leeds Burley is an inner city area of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, north-west of Leeds city centre, between the A65 Kirkstall Road at the south and Headingley at the north, in the Kirkstall ward. Etymology The name is first attested in 1195 a ...
in 1841. The house was burgled in 1843, and according to the ''Leeds Mercury'': "A number of thieves effected an entrance into Burley House, the residence of John Smith, Esq., by the cellar windows, and stripped the larder of its contents". The house was more secure by the time it was burgled again in 1850. The ''Leeds Intelligencer'' tells the story:
Burley House asentered by thieves, but fortunately not so effectively as to give them access to much booty. It appears that they first penetrated into the ale-cellar and paid some attention to the liquor they found there, a considerable quantity of which they allowed to run to waste. They also removed an iron bar from the window of the
butler's pantry A pantry is a room or cupboard where beverages, food, and sometimes dishes, household cleaning products, linens or provisions are stored within a home or office. Food and beverage pantries serve in an ancillary capacity to the kitchen. Etym ...
, but did not succeed in effecting an entrance into that apartment, and finally they left the premises of Mr. Smith, taking nothing with them except the said iron bar and a bottle which had contained ale.
The miscreants then proceeded to employ the iron bar to burglariously enter and steal from the Misses Dixon at nearby Burley Cottage, leaving the ale bottle there, then to attempt, unsuccessfully, to enter the house of John Cudworth at Burley Villa. As of 2 February the thieves remained at large. While living at Burley House, Smith took part in the annual Burley floral and horticultural show, showing plants grown on his estate, including " fuscias,
acacia ''Acacia'', commonly known as the wattles or acacias, is a large genus of shrubs and trees in the subfamily Mimosoideae of the pea family Fabaceae. Initially, it comprised a group of plant species native to Africa and Australasia. The genus na ...
s, heaths", and at least nine types of fruit. The house was sold at the end of 1866, after Smith's death. The sales description by Hepper & Sons of Leeds was as follows:
All that handsome and spacious mansion, the residence of the late John Smith, Esq., called Burley House, with the commodious stabling, conservatory, vineries, orchard houses, and gardens attached, comprising altogether ... Also, all that field in front of the above, containing near .


Belvedere

This former mansion, Belvedere, Victoria Avenue, in Harrogate, was built by Richard Ellis around 1861 for Smith, as his own residence. The house name was originally spelled "Belvidere". It is a Grade II listed building, and was designed by architects Perkin and Backhouse. The ground was broken in 1860, and it was "only gradually brought to a partial completion". In its time, the building has contained St Peter's School and Harrogate School of Art, and it once had stabling on the south side. As of 2023 it had been divided into offices. The two remaining original frontages of the house, facing The Stray and Victoria Avenue, are faced with Birk Crag stone. It has a tower, a flag tower which originally functioned as an
observatory An observatory is a location used for observing terrestrial, marine, or celestial events. Astronomy, climatology/meteorology, geophysical, oceanography and volcanology are examples of disciplines for which observatories have been constructed. His ...
, and
bay A bay is a recessed, coastal body of water that directly connects to a larger main body of water, such as an ocean, a lake, or another bay. A large bay is usually called a Gulf (geography), gulf, sea, sound (geography), sound, or bight (geogra ...
and
oriel window An oriel window is a form of bay window which protrudes from the main wall of a building but does not reach to the ground. Supported by corbels, bracket (architecture), brackets, or similar cantilevers, an oriel window is most commonly found pro ...
s. The porte-cochère has carvings in cleansed
Harehills Harehills is an inner-city area of east Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It is approximately north east of Leeds city centre. Harehills is situated between the A58 (towards Wetherby) and the A64 (towards York). It sits in the Gipton & Ha ...
stone. Although the interior is now converted into offices, it was once grand inside. The ''Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer'' described it thus in 1868, when Smith's family sold it:
he vestibule has ablack and white marble floor and broad vein marble steps leading to the hall, from which it is separated by a handsome wood and plate-glass screen with folding doors. The hall ... has an elaborately decorated ceiling, is warmed by an expensive stove, and communicates with the upper floors by a broad winding staircase, with moulded walnut handrail and elegant iron ballusters and
dome light The lighting system of a motor vehicle consists of lighting and signalling devices mounted to or integrated into the front, rear, sides, and in some cases the top of a motor vehicle. They illuminate the road ahead for the driver and increase t ...
. On the right of the hall is a well-proportioned morning-room ... having a costly Sienna marble mantelpiece and rich ceiling decorations; on the left is the dining room ... with a noble black and gold marble mantelpiece; a lavatory and separate entrance from the serving lobby, in which is a hoist adjoining the butler's pantry and bedroom. Further on are a water closet, side entrance to the street, and a waiting room or day-nursery. The first floor presents the truly splendid drawing-room, with its statuary, marble
chimney-piece The fireplace mantel or mantelpiece, also known as a chimneypiece, originated in medieval times as a hood that projected over a fire grate to catch the smoke. The term has evolved to include the decorative framework around the fireplace, and c ...
of most elegant design, a ceiling divided into compartments and profusely ornamented, and a fine bay window, from which are obtained views of vast extent, and unrivalled for variety and beauty. Next in order is a boudoir, opening into a large bed-room, attached to which is a dressing-room, fitted with water-closet and fixed lavatory supplied with hot and cold water. Then there is another principal bedroom, a superior bath-room supplied with capital plunge and shower baths, hot and cold water apparatus, and water closet; a chambermaid's closet, and a secondary bedroom. On the second floor are seven sleeping apartments, dressing room, chambermaid's and linen closets, and two water-closets. In the tower is a good bedroom, and in the attics hot and cold water cisterns, and abundant storage room, while at the north-west angle a flagstaff turret is fitted up as an observatory. In the basement, which is well lighted and thoroughly ventilated ... are the servant's hall, housekeeper's room, a large cooking kitchen with most complete and costly fittings, a scullery, good larders and pantries, a boot-house, washhouse, wine, ale, coal and bottle cellars, water-closet and area opening into the enclosed yard. All the bedrooms are fitted with vein marble mantelpieces, and in many instances with dress closets ... The painting and decoration, too, form a noteworthy feature. The remainder of the estate consists of a small but tasteful flower garden, a paved yard, and a large kitchen garden, enclosed by very substantial stone walls relieved with sunk panels. here isadjoining stabling for 13 horses, four coach houses, two
loose box A loose box, also loose-box or loosebox is a stall or compartment in a stable A stable is a building in which livestock, especially horses, are kept. It most commonly means a building that is divided into separate stalls for individual anim ...
es, saddle and men's rooms, hay chambers, and a cottage.


Death

During the last two years of his life, Smith suffered "a repetition of severe attacks" of illness, and spent much time at home in Belvedere. His health gave "great anxiety" to his family and friends. He had a "strong constitution" and would occasionally rally, but following his long illness, Smith died at Harrogate on 23 September 1866. Smith's funeral took place at Harrogate on 28 September 1866, when a special train was run from Leeds railway station to Harrogate, for the large number of mourners expected. Smith's will was proved on 28 November 1966. He left effects under £140,000 ().


Notes


References


External links

{{DEFAULTSORT:Smith, John 1792 births 1866 deaths People from Aberdeen 19th-century Scottish businesspeople Scottish bankers Scottish philanthropists 19th-century British philanthropists People from Harrogate