Sir Samuel Stanier (1649-28 August 1724) of Wanstead, Essex, was a London merchant who became Lord Mayor of London in 1713
Stanier was the eldest son of James Stanier of St. Mary Axe, London [1] and his wife Thomasine Meade. His father was a merchant, trading with Italy, who died in 1666. In 1673, Stanier inherited from his uncle, Robert Stanier, houses and lands in Bethnal Green and lands in the parish of Hackney. [2]
He was also a considerable investor in the TransAtlantic Slave Trade and was duty-governor of the Royal African Company of England for the RAC between 1693 to 1694. Also an assistant (director) in the Royal African Company 1686-1688, 1691-1692, 1695-1699, 1702-1706, 1780. [3] He had part-ownership in many RAC Guineamen, trading in enslaved Africans with the Hannibal slave ship being just one example. [4] [5]
Stanier became a merchant of Bishopsgate and was a member of the Drapers Company. He was a common councillor for Aldgate from 1698 to 1705; and was elected an Alderman of Aldgate on 27 September 1705. He was Sheriff of London from 1705 to 1706 and was knighted on 18 December 1705. He was also Master of the Drapers Company for the year 1705 to 1706. From 1707 to 1710 he was Colonel of the Red Regiment of the City Militia. He stood for Parliament for City of London at the 1708 general election but was unsuccessful. In 1713 he became Lord Mayor of London. Subsequently, he was Colonel of the Red Regiment for the rest of his life. [6]
Stanier died on 28 August 1724. [6]
Field Marshal George Hamilton, 1st Earl of Orkney,, styled Lord George Hamilton from 1666 to 1696, was a British soldier and Scottish nobleman and the first British Army officer to be promoted to the rank of field marshal. After commanding a regiment for the cause of William of Orange during the Williamite War in Ireland, he commanded a regiment in the Low Countries during the Nine Years' War. He then led the final assault at the Battle of Blenheim attacking the village churchyard with eight battalions of men and then receiving the surrender of its French defenders during the War of the Spanish Succession. He also led the charge of fifteen infantry battalions in an extremely bloody assault on the French entrenchments at the Battle of Malplaquet. In later life, he became a Lord of the Bedchamber to George I and was installed as Governor of Edinburgh Castle.
Sir Gilbert Heathcote, 1st Baronet was an English merchant and Whig politician who sat in the English and British House of Commons between 1701 and 1733. He also served as the governor of the Bank of England and was Lord Mayor of London in 1711.
John Hay, 2nd Marquess of Tweeddale PC was a Scottish nobleman.
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The Hannibal was a slave ship, hired by the Royal African Company of England. The ship participated in two slave trading voyages, in the Triangular Trade. The wooden sailing ship was 450 tons and mounted with thirty-six guns. The ship is most remembered for her disastrous voyage of 1693–95. Captain Thomas Phillips commanded the Hannibal. He was a Welsh sea captain from Brecon, Wales who was employed by the Sir Jeffrey Jeffreys, and others. who owned the Hannibal and were governors and Assistants in the Royal African Company.
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Sir John Cass was an English merchant, Tory Member of Parliament and philanthropist. He was also a key figure in the Royal African Company, which was involved in the Atlantic slave trade.
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Yves d'Alègre. He was the fifth head of the Alègre family, and marquis of Tourzel as well as seigneur of Montaigu, of Saint-Flour-le-Châtel, of Aurouze and of Aubusson and count of Flaugeac.
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