Jardine, Skinner and Company

Last updated
Jardine Skinner & Co., Jardine Henderson Ltd.
IndustryTrading
FoundedBombay, India (1825 (1825))
Defunct1946 (1946)
FateMerged into Jardine Henderson
SuccessorJardine Henderson Ltd.
Headquarters,
India
Area served
Britain, India, China
ProductsTextiles, opium, tea etc.

Jardine, Skinner and Company was a trading company based in Calcutta, India. It was founded in 1825, initially dealing in textiles. Later it branched out into opium, tea, timber and petroleum. The company was closely associated with Matheson & Company of London and Jardine Matheson & Co. of Hong Kong.

Contents

Early years

Jardine, Skinner & Co. was founded in 1825 in Bombay. [1] The early partners of Jardine Skinner were from Scotland, as were the partners of many of the British managing agencies of Bombay and Calcutta. [2] Kinship ties were important, with new members often drawn from Scottish relatives. [3] In 1844 the company was reformed in Calcutta by David Jardine and Charles B. Skinner. [1] David Jardine (1819-1853) was the eldest son of William Jardine's sister Margaret. [4]

Jardine Skinner was a merchant and also became a shipping agent and shareholder in shipping companies. [5] The company imported cotton goods from Manchester and Glasgow, and exported indigo, silk, and later jute. Their agents in Glasgow were James Ewing & Co., and their agents in Manchester were Matheson & Scott. The latter was associated with Matheson & Company of London and Jardine Matheson of Hong Kong. [1] Jardine Skinner and Jardine Matheson were not legally connected, although both used the facilities of Matheson & Co., which James Matheson founded in 1848 after he returned from China. [6]

Opium trade

With high levels of competition in the textile trade, Jardine Skinner earned additional income by shipping opium to Jardine Matheson in China. [1] While Jardines carried opium for the larger suppliers, Apcar and Company catered to many smaller local dealers. With slower boats, the Apcars charged much lower rates than Jardines, ranging from Rs8 to Rs10 per chest compared to upward of Rs28 per chest charged by Jardines. [7] The Apcars and Jardine Skinner also exported opium to Singapore for use by the Chinese in the Malay Peninsula or for distribution to other locations in southeast Asia. [8]

There were two types of opium, Bengal opium and Malwa opium, produced by private growers in central India and Rajputana. [9] In the early years Jardine Skinner had to deal with fluctuations in both quality and quantity, but strict controls later helped standardize the product. [10] In 1856 a risk emerged from P&O, who appeared to be trying to enter and dominate the opium trade by undercutting the rival companies. The companies managed to strike a deal to retain the current rates. [11] By 1860 Jardine Skinner and Jardine Matheson dominated the opium trade. [12]

Later expansion

Jardine Skinner was one of the more prosperous of the British trading houses in India, but was relatively small. In the 1845–48 period it operated with a liquid capital of just £100,000. [13] In the 1850s the company was the agent for the large Glasgow merchant house of J & A Dennistoun, which was active in England, France, the USA and Australia. [14] In the late 1850s Matheson and Company was appointed Jardine-Skinner's principal agent in London, handling imports of commodities such as tea, rice, silk, cotton, jute and indigo. [15] In the early 1960s Jardine Skinner represented J. Ewing and Company of Glasgow, the turkey-red dyers. [16]

By 1860 Jardine Skinner were conducting a large trade in tea, and later they expanded into timber and petroleum. [17] Jardine Skinner entered into joint ownership arrangements with Matheson & Co. of a number of tea estates in the early 1860s. [18] In the 1880s Jardine Skinner was profitable, but only making a return of 2% – 3% on capital. [19] The original indigo and silk filature businesses were no longer profitable, and the company was looking for new ways to deploy its capital. [20] Capital rose to £1.3 million by 1890. The company had to weather financial crises in 1848 and 1866, supported by credit from Matheson & Co., and in 1890 returned the favor when Matheson found itself in difficulty. [17]

The company was among the most influential of the agency houses that dominated the Bengal Chamber of Commerce, after Andrew Yule and Company and Bird and Company. [21] By 1890 Jardine Skinner controlled six jute mill companies out of a total of twenty-one in India. With ample capital, the company was having difficulty finding investment opportunities. [22] Jardine Skinner was the fourth largest jute mills operator in 1910-11 after Bird and Company, Thomas Duff and Company and Andrew Yule. [23] The jute trade suffered at times from oversupply. Jardine Skinner was among the major Calcutta firms whose representatives met in London on 10 October 1911 to discuss setting up a cartel to regulate the trade. [24]

In the early 20th century the laws governing companies in India were relaxed, making it possible for firms like Jardine Skinner to control large numbers of publicly traded enterprises with very little capital outlay. Jardine Skinner would typically run the companies they controlled as if they were subsidiaries, dispensing with boards of directors. [25] In 1946 Jardine Skinner merged with George Henderson to form Jardine Henderson. At first the Jardine and Stuart families controlled the new firm, although some Indian families held 40% of the shares. In the early 1970s a large number of shares were transferred to Indians as the main British shareholders died. Several British shareholders of the company remain to this day. [6] As of 2016 Jardine Henderson had pan-India pest control operations, headquartered in Kolkata. [26] The company also had interests in real estate, mining, engineering tea gardens and marketing, carton manufacturing and printing, through Shalimar Paints, Bellis India, Color Cartons Limited, Diamond Products and Packaging Limited, Rydak Syndicate, and others, some of which it continues to operate. [27] [28]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William Jardine (merchant)</span>

William Jardine was a Scottish physician, opium merchant and trader who co-founded the Hong Kong based conglomerate Jardine, Matheson & Co. Following his return to England from the Far East, between 1841 and 1843, he was Member of Parliament for Ashburton representing the Whig party.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dwarkanath Tagore</span>

Dwarkanath Tagore was one of the first Indian industrialists to form an enterprise with British partners. He was the son of Ramlochon Tagore, the founder of the Jorasanko branch of the Tagore family. He was also the grandfather of Rabindranath Tagore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Matheson</span>

Sir James Nicolas Sutherland Matheson, 1st Baronet, FRS, was a Scottish Tai-Pan. Born in Shiness, Lairg, Sutherland, Scotland, he was the son of Captain Donald Matheson. He attended Edinburgh's Royal High School and the University of Edinburgh. He and William Jardine went on to co-found the Hong Kong-based trading conglomerate Jardine Matheson & Co. that became today's Jardine Matheson Holdings.

The Keswick family are a business dynasty of Scottish origin associated with the Far East region since 1855 and in particular the conglomerate Jardine Matheson.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dent & Co.</span>

Dent & Co. or Dent's, was one of the wealthiest British merchant firms, or Hongs, active in China during the 19th century. A direct rival to Jardine, Matheson & Co, together with Russell & Co., these three companies are recognised as the original Canton Hongs active in early Colonial Hong Kong.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hugh Matheson (industrialist)</span>

Hugh Mackay Matheson was a 19th-century Scottish industrialist, trader, Church of Scotland lay minister and supporter of Presbyterian church missions to China. He was the senior partner of Matheson and Company and founding company president of the Rio Tinto mining group.

<i>Sylph</i> (1831 ship) Clipper ship

Sylph was a clipper ship built at Sulkea, opposite Calcutta, in 1831 for the Parsi merchant Rustomjee Cowasjee. After her purchase by the Hong Kong-based merchant house Jardine Matheson, in 1833 Sylph set a speed record by sailing from Calcutta to Macao in 17 days, 17 hours. Her primary role was to transport opium between various ports in the Far East. She disappeared en route to Singapore in 1849.

Sir John Valentine Jardine Paterson was a Scottish businessman whose career was mostly in India.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Daniel Beale</span> Scottish merchant and fur trader

Daniel Beale (1759–1842) was a Scottish merchant and fur trader active in the Far East mercantile centres of Bombay, Canton and Macau as well as at one time the Prussian consul in China.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of Jardine Matheson & Co.</span>

Jardine, Matheson & Co., later Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., forerunner of today's Jardine Matheson Holdings, was a Far Eastern company founded in 1832 by Scotsmen William Jardine and James Matheson as senior partners. Trafficking opium in Asia, while also trading cotton, tea, silk and a variety of other goods, from its early beginnings in Canton, in 1844 the firm established its head office in the new British colony of Hong Kong then proceeded to expand all along the China Coast.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jardine Matheson</span> British conglomerate that incorporated in Bermuda and headquartered in Hong Kong

Jardine Matheson Holdings Limited is a Hong Kong-based Bermuda-domiciled British multinational conglomerate. It has a primary listing on the London Stock Exchange and secondary listings on the Singapore Exchange and Bermuda Stock Exchange. The majority of its business interests are in Asia, and its subsidiaries include Jardine Pacific, Jardine Motors, Hongkong Land, Jardine Strategic Holdings, DFI Retail Group, Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group, Jardine Cycle & Carriage and Astra International. It set up the Jardine Scholarship in 1982 and Mindset, a mental health-focused charity, in 2002.

<i>Red Rover</i> (clipper)

Red Rover was the name of two clipper ships.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Apcar Alexander Apcar</span>

Sir Apcar Alexander Apcar was a wealthy Armenian businessman in Calcutta, India. His family had made their fortune in the opium trade with China. He was president of the Bengal Chamber of Commerce, sat on the Imperial Legislative Council, and in 1903 was knighted. He owned a racehorse stud, and for several years was the leading figure in the Indian racing world.

Apcar and Company was a firm founded in 1819 in India that engaged in shipping, import and export. The most profitable trade was in opium, shipped from India to Hong Kong and the Pearl River. The Apcar Line also carried Indian and Chinese laborers for work in Malaya and Singapore. The line was sold to the British India Steam Navigation Company in 1912.

Matheson & Company was a London-based trading house closely associated with Jardine Matheson of Hong Kong and Jardine Skinner of Calcutta. It arranged finance and handled imports from those two companies of products such as tea, silk and jute. Matheson & Company also became involved in venture-capital, specializing in mining. The company was a member of the consortium that formed the Rio Tinto Company. After 1912 it became a subsidiary of Jardine Matheson.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Sassoon & Co.</span>

David Sassoon & Co., Ltd. was a trading company operating in the 19th century and early 20th century predominantly in India, China and Japan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Destruction of opium at Humen</span>

The destruction of opium at Humen began on 3 June 1839 and involved the destruction of 1,000 long tons of illegal opium seized from British traders under the aegis of Lin Zexu, an Imperial Commissioner of Qing China. Conducted on the banks of the Pearl River outside Humen Town, Dongguan, China, the action provided casus belli for Great Britain to declare war on Qing China. What followed is now known as the First Opium War (1839–1842), a conflict that initiated China's opening for trade with foreign nations under a series of treaties with the western powers.

Hercules was built at Calcutta in 1814. She acquired British registry and traded between Britain and India under a license from the British East India Company (EIC), before returning to Calcutta registry. She then traded opium between India and China, and became an opium receiving ship for Jardine Matheson. In 1839 she was one of the vessels that surrendered her store of opium to be burned at the behest of Chinese officials at Canton. This incident was one of the proximate causes of the First Opium War (1839–1842). Her owners apparently sold her to American owners in 1839.

The Acland Mill was the first jute mill established in India. The mill was established in 1855 by British entrepreneur George Acland and Bengali financier Babu Bysumber Sen in Rishra, Bengal Presidency, British India.

References

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 Chapman 2004, p. 114.
  2. Misra 1999, p. 29.
  3. Misra 1999, p. 32.
  4. Pichon 2006, p. 529.
  5. Jones 2002, p. 52.
  6. 1 2 Jones 2000, p. 33.
  7. Harcourt 2006, p. 104.
  8. Munro 2003, p. 58.
  9. Harcourt 2006, p. 92.
  10. Harcourt 2006, p. 93.
  11. Harcourt 2006, p. 106.
  12. Trocki 1999, p. 112.
  13. Chapman 2004, p. 99.
  14. Munro 2003, p. 29.
  15. Harvey 1981, p. 8.
  16. Munro 2003, p. 16.
  17. 1 2 Chapman 2004, p. 115.
  18. Harvey 1981, p. 9.
  19. Misra 1999, p. 24.
  20. Wilkins & Schröter 1998, p. 208.
  21. Misra 1999, p. 40.
  22. Chapman 2004, p. 124.
  23. Bagchi 1970, p. 236.
  24. Stewart 1998, p. 89.
  25. Wilkins & Schröter 1998, p. 207.
  26. Welcome to Jardine Henderson Limited.
  27. About Jardine Henderson Limited.
  28. "Jardine Henderson – Corporate Website" . Retrieved 2021-04-10.

Sources