Moses Benson
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Moses Benson (1738 – 6 June 1806) was a British West Indies merchant, who became heavily engaged in the
Liverpool Liverpool is a city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside, England. With a population of in 2019, it is the 10th largest English district by population and its metropolitan area is the fifth largest in the United Kingdom, with a popul ...
slave trade Slavery and enslavement are both the state and the condition of being a slave—someone forbidden to quit one's service for an enslaver, and who is treated by the enslaver as property. Slavery typically involves slaves being made to perf ...
.


Origins

Benson was the son of John Benson (1684–1766), a salt dealer of Mansriggs, near
Ulverston Ulverston is a market town and a civil parish in the South Lakeland district of Cumbria, England. In the 2001 census the parish had a population of 11,524, increasing at the 2011 census to 11,678. Historically in Lancashire, it lies a few mi ...
, in Furness.Richardson, Schwarz and Tibbles, ''Liverpool and Transatlantic Slavery'' (Liverpool University Press, 2007)John Burke, ''A genealogical and heraldic dictionary of the landed gentry of Great Britain & Ireland'' (Henry Colburn, London, 1850)


Career

In the 1760s, Benson became a captain in the West India trade for Abraham Rawlinson, a Lancaster merchant, and acted as Rawlinson's agent in Jamaica, before commencing trade in the West Indies on his own account. Having acquired a significant fortune, Benson returned to Liverpool, where in 1775 he entered the slave trade. Between 1775 and his death in 1806, he can be associated with no fewer than 67 slaving ventures. He bought a large house in Duke Street in Liverpool, which occupied an entire block between Cornwallis Street, Kent Street and St. James's Street. In 1797, Benson was appointed to the committee charged with conducting the arrangements for the defence of Liverpool. In 1802 he built and endowed St. James's School, in St. James's Road, for poor children. By 1835, the school was educating nearly 200 boys and about 100 girls. Benson died on 5 June 1806. In 1807, the trustees of his estate bought an estate at Lutwyche, in
Shropshire Shropshire (; alternatively Salop; abbreviated in print only as Shrops; demonym Salopian ) is a landlocked historic county in the West Midlands region of England. It is bordered by Wales to the west and the English counties of Cheshire to th ...
, which then passed to his heirs. Alternatively, according to historian Jane Longmore, Benson bought the Lutwyche estate himself in the 1780s. Benson's will was a controversial document. It identified his four children as his children or “reputed” children and made no mention of their mother (Judith Powell) whom he never married. According to records in Jamaican archives, Judith Powell was a "free mustee", indicating she was of partly black ancestry. Despite the apparent de facto relationship, Judith accompanied Moses and their children on his return Liverpool and remained there until her death. A bequest of £15,000 to his daughter Mary was revoked in the event that she married a native of Ireland. The complications of administering his estate were such as to lead to a private Act of Parliament some 24 years after his death, in 1830.''Journal of the House of Commons'', volume 85 (1830)


Family

Benson had four children who survived him: * Ralph Benson (died October 1845), who married Barbara, the daughter of Thomas Lewin, and was MP for
Stafford Stafford () is a market town and the county town of Staffordshire, in the West Midlands region of England. It lies about north of Wolverhampton, south of Stoke-on-Trent and northwest of Birmingham. The town had a population of 70,145 in t ...
* Moses Benson (1780–1837), who married Margaret Kendall, the daughter of Capt. John Kendall of Liverpool & the 'Molly', a slave vessel, and Margaret Ward * Mary Benson, who married the Rev. Charles Gladwin * Jane-Dorothea Benson, who married Richard Elmshirst of West Ashby, Lincolnshire


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Benson, Moses 1738 births 1806 deaths People from Ulverston West Indies merchants English slave traders Founders of English schools and colleges 18th-century philanthropists 18th-century English businesspeople